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Table of contents :
Preface
Part I – A Broad View of the Philosophy of Mathematics Education
1 Paul Ernest
2 Michael Otte and Mircea Radu
3 Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo
4 Thomas Hausberger and Frédéric Patras
5 Jonh Mason
6 Steven Watson
7 Gerald A. Goldin
Part II – Philosophy of Mathematics Education: Creativity and Educational Perspectives
8 Bronisław Czarnocha
9 William Baker
10 Mitsuru Matsushima
11 Regina D. Möller and Peter Collignon
12 Małgorzata Marciniak
13 Yenealem Ayalew
Part III – Philosophy of Critical Mathematics Education, Modelling and Education for Sustainable
14 Ole Skovsmose
15 Nadia Stoyanova Kennedy
16 Uwe Schürmann
17 Hui Chuan Li
Part IV – Philosophy of Mathematics Education in Diverse Perspectives, Cultures, and Environments
18 Antonio Miguel, Elizabeth Gomes Souza and Carolina Tamayo
19 Maurício Rosa
20 Min Bahadur Shrestha
21 Karla Sepúlveda Obreque and Javier Lezama Andalon
22 Thomas E. Ricks
Part V – Concluding
23 Bronisław Czarnocha and Małgorzata Marciniak
Introduction
Introducing the Theme of Part I
Introducing the Theme of Part II
Introducing the Theme of Part III
Introducing the Theme of Part IV
Contents
About the Contributors
Part I: A Broad View of the Philosophy of Mathematics Education
Chapter 1: The Ontological Problems of Mathematics and Mathematics Education
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Mathematical Objects
1.2.1 Critique of Platonism
1.2.2 Meaning Theory
1.2.3 What Are the Objects of Mathematics?
1.2.4 Mathematical Signs and Their Performativity
1.2.5 The Constitutional Role of Social Agreement for Mathematical Objects
1.2.6 Signs as Constitutive of Mathematical Objects
1.2.7 The Human Construction of Mathematical Objects
1.2.8 The Ontology of Mathematical Objects
1.3 Human Subjects and Mathematical Identities
1.3.1 Being in Terms of Mathematical Identity
1.3.2 The Ideology of Individualism
1.3.3 Conversation and the Social Construction of Persons
1.3.4 The Critical Roles of Proponent and Responder in Conversation
1.3.5 The Significance of Conversation in Social Activity
1.3.6 The Realities We Inhabit
1.3.7 Conversation and the Genesis of Thinking
1.3.8 Extending the Meaning as Use Theory
1.3.9 Dialogic Space
1.3.10 Roles and Power Differentials in Conversation
1.3.11 Mathematical Enculturation
1.4 Conclusion
References
Chapter 2: Scientific Revolutions: From Popper to Heisenberg
2.1 Introduction
2.2 A Reassuring Fact?
2.3 What About the Object of Cognition
2.4 Some Remarks on Semiotics, Logic, and Epistemology
2.5 Heisenberg’s Ambivalent Praise of Kuhn: Some Implications
2.6 Aesthetics and Scientific Theory Building: Heisenberg and Kepler
2.7 Aesthetic Desire and Experience
2.8 Conclusions
References
Chapter 3: Questions That Are at the Core of a Mathematics Education “Project”
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The Production of Mathematics
3.2.1 Logical Aspects of Pre-Categorial Knowledge and What They Mean for Mathematics Education
3.2.2 Logical Aspects of Categorial Knowledge and Its Implications to Mathematics Education
3.2.3 The Loss of Meaning Implicit in the Transposition of Geometric Logic into Physics and What it Means for Mathematics Education
3.3 Mathematization as Methodological and Ontological Foundation of Reality: What it Means for Mathematics Education
3.4 Mathematics Education: Necessary Philosophical Thought
References
Chapter 4: Networking Phenomenology and Didactics: Horizon of Didactical Milieus with a Focus on Abstract Algebra
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Horizons in Teacher Education
4.3 Modeling Teaching-Learning Phenomena
4.4 The Horizon According to Husserl
4.5 Toward a Typology of Horizons
4.6 Application to Abstract Algebra
4.7 Horizons of the Abstract Structure of Banquets
4.8 Conclusion and Perspectives
References
Chapter 5: Specifying Defining, Generalising and Abstracting Mathematically All Seen as Subtly Different Shifts of Attention
5.1 Introduction
5.1.1 Background Frames
Brunerian Spirals
Example Spaces
Forms of Attention
5.1.2 Attention, Awareness, and Consciousness
5.2 Method
5.3 Shifts of Attention
5.4 Generalising and Abstracting
5.5 Generalising But Not Abstracting
5.6 Poised Between Generalising and Abstracting
5.7 Abstracting as an Action
5.8 Difference Divisible
5.9 Reflection
5.10 Defining and Specifying
5.11 Other Instances of Abstracting in School Mathematics
5.12 Names
5.13 Geometry
5.13.1 Shape Naming
Perimeter and Area
5.14 Constructions in Triangles
5.15 Pythagoras
5.16 Trig Functions
5.17 Cosine and Sine Rules
5.18 Numbers
5.18.1 Types of Numbers
5.19 Symbolised Numbers: π, and
5.20 GCD and LCM
5.21 Euclidean Algorithm
5.22 Zero and Infinity
5.22.1 Completed and Unfolding Infinities
5.22.2 Empty-Sets and Zero
5.22.3 Wholeness of One
5.23 Conclusions
References
Chapter 6: Toward a Systems Theory Approach to Mathematics Education
6.1 Introduction
6.2 Systems Theory
6.3 What Kind of System Is Mathematics Education?
6.4 The System of Society and Education
6.5 The System of Mathematics
6.6 Toward a System Theory Approach to Mathematics Education
6.7 Concluding Remarks
References
Chapter 7: On Mathematical Validity and Its Human Origins
7.1 Introduction: Essentials for a Philosophy of Mathematics Education
7.2 Sources of Objective Truth and Validity in Mathematics
7.2.1 Social Constructivism
7.2.2 Objective Truth in Mathematics
7.2.3 Objectivism
7.2.4 Fallibilism
7.3 The “Why” of Mathematics
7.4 Mathematics and Fundamental Human Needs: Conation and Mathematical Engagement
7.5 Summary and Conclusion
References
Part II: Philosophy of Mathematics Education: Creativity and Educational Perspectives
Chapter 8: Towards a Philosophy of Creativity in Mathematics Education
8.1 Introduction
8.2 What Is Creativity?
8.3 Creativity and Learning
8.4 Summary
8.5 Creativity and Its Value
8.6 Is Creativity Measurable?
8.7 Why Is It Important to Measure Creativity?
8.8 New Theory of Creativity in Mathematics Education
8.8.1 Definition
8.9 Summary of Arguments
8.10 Philosophical Conclusions
References
Chapter 9: A Framework for Creative Insights Within Internalization of Mathematics
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Theoretical Foundations
9.2.1 Matrices Codes, Schemes
9.2.2 Blocked Non-assimilatory Situation and Discovery of Hidden Analogy
9.2.3 Bisociation
9.2.4 Understanding and Discovery
9.2.5 Integrated Frame: Bisociation-Koestler
9.2.6 Reflective Abstraction and the Formation of the Action Scheme
9.2.7 Interiorization
9.2.8 Participatory and Anticipatory Schemes
9.2.9 Moments of Insight and Internalization-Interiorization
9.2.10 Internalization: Vygotsky
9.2.11 Appropriation and Internalization
9.3 Pedagogy: Constructivism and Vygotsky
9.4 Research
9.5 Stages of Internalization: Empirical Examples
9.5.1 Interpersonal Learning Social Participatory Stage
9.5.2 Discussion: Example 1
9.5.3 Active Internalization: Interpersonal to Intrapersonal – Heap Stage
9.5.4 Example 2: T-INTERVAL
9.5.5 Discussion
9.5.6 Internalization Complex Stage
9.5.7 Example 3: The Domain Aha Moment (Czarnocha & Baker, 2021, p. 99–101)
9.5.8 Internalization: Pseudo-Concept Stage
9.5.9 Discussion
9.6 Concluding Remarks
References
Chapter 10: A Reconsideration of Appropriation from a Sociocultural Perspective
10.1 Introduction
10.2 Structure of This Chapter
10.3 Problems Related to the Concept of Appropriation
10.4 Appropriation as a Concept to Overcome the Problems of Internalization
10.5 Relationship Between Appropriation Process and Intersubjectivity
10.6 Two Meanings of Deviation in Appropriation
10.7 Reconsideration of Appropriation Features
10.8 Future Research
References
Chapter 11: Towards a Philosophy of Algorithms as an Element of Mathematics Education
11.1 Different Roles of Algorithms Throughout History
11.2 The Traditional Role of Algorithms in Math Classes
11.3 Changes in the Phenomena of Algorithms Resulting in Challenges for Math Classes
11.4 Towards a Philosophical Approach of the Meanings of Algorithms
11.4.1 Preliminary Philosophical Considerations
11.4.2 Further Philosophical Observations
11.4.3 Algorithms and Their Connections Within Sciences
11.5 Conclusion and Outlook
References
Chapter 12: The Times of Transitions in the Modern Education
12.1 Introduction
12.2 Pandemic Articles and Observations
12.3 Kuhn Theory
12.4 Pivoting Moments in History
12.4.1 Compulsory Education
12.4.2 From Religious to Secular Education
12.4.3 Public Education Available for Everybody
12.5 The Current Pivoting Moment
12.6 Summary
References
Chapter 13: Some Examples of Mathematical Paradoxes with Implications for the Professional Development of Teachers
13.1 Introduction
13.2 The Essence of Mathematics
13.3 Mathematical Paradoxes
13.4 Taking One Plus One as an Example
13.5 Associated Meanings in Mathematics Education
13.6 Professional Competencies of Mathematics Teachers
13.7 Conclusions
References
Part III: Philosophy of Critical Mathematics Education, Modelling and Education for Sustainable
Chapter 14: A Performative Interpretation of Mathematics
14.1 Introduction
14.2 The Three Magi: Merry Mathematics!
14.3 A Performative Interpretation of Language
14.4 Performances Through Advanced Mathematics
14.5 Performances Through School Mathematics
14.6 Ethical Reflections
References
Chapter 15: Reflective Knowing in the Mathematics Classroom: The Potential of Philosophical Inquiry for Critical Mathematics Education
15.1 Introduction
15.2 On Reflective Knowing
15.3 Philosophical Inquiry, Dialogue, and Judgment
15.4 A Framework for Philosophical Inquiry in Mathematics
15.4.1 Inquiry with Reference to Mathematical Concepts
15.4.2 Inquiry with Reference to Invented (Textbook) Situations
15.4.3 Inquiry with Reference to Real Situations Described Mathematically
15.5 The Potential Role of Philosophical Inquiry in the Classroom
15.6 Conclusion
References
Chapter 16: Mathematical Modelling: A Philosophy of Science Perspective
16.1 Introduction
16.1.1 Orientation
16.1.2 Focus
16.2 Analysis
16.2.1 Carnap’s Syntactic View on Models
16.2.2 Suppes’ Semantic View on Models
16.2.3 Theoretical and Empirical Concepts
16.2.4 Correspondence Rules and Partial Interpretation
16.3 Modelling in Mathematics Classroom from a Syntactic Point of View
16.3.1 Epistemological Question
16.3.2 Methodological Question
16.4 Conclusion and Outlook
References
Chapter 17: Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) in Mathematics Education: Reconfiguring and Rethinking the Philosophy of Mathematics for the Twenty-First Century
17.1 Background
17.2 Current State of Education for Sustainable Development in Mathematics Education
17.3 What Mathematics Is and What It Means to Understand Mathematics
17.4 Equity, Social Justice, and Mathematics Education
17.5 Interdisciplinary Learning, STEM Education, and Mathematics Education
17.6 A Call for Reconfiguring and Rethinking the Philosophy of Mathematics for the Twenty-First Century
17.7 Concluding Marks
References
Part IV: Philosophy of Mathematics Education in Diverse Perspectives, Cultures, and Environments
Chapter 18: Asé O’u Toryba ‘Ara Îabi’õnduara!
18.1 Introduction
18.2 Therapeutic Debate
References
Chapter 19: Mathematics Education and Ubuntu Philosophy: The Analysis of Antiracist Mathematical Activity with Digital Technologies
19.1 Introduction
19.2 The Temporality/Spatiality Marked by a White Mathematics
19.3 Digital Technologies and Racism: What Does Mathematics Education Have to Do with It?
19.4 Ubuntu Philosophy and Mathematics Education: Possible Interconnections
19.5 An Antiracist Mathematical Activity with DT
19.6 Antiracist Mathematical Educational Movements: Be-ing-Becoming Antiracist
References
Chapter 20: Philosophy, Rigor, and Axiomatics in Mathematics: Imposed or Intimately Related?
20.1 Introduction
20.2 Rigor in Mathematical Argumentation
20.3 The Axiomatic Method
20.4 Rigor and Reasoning in Traditional Hindu Mathematics
20.5 Philosophical Reflection
20.6 Summary and Conclusion
References
Chapter 21: Idealism and Materialism in Mathematics Teaching: An Analysis from the Socio-epistemological Theory
21.1 Introduction
21.2 Mathematical Knowledge: A Vision from Idealism and Materialism
21.3 Philosophical Expressions of the School Curriculum
21.4 A Look at Classroom Work
21.5 Final Considerations
References
Chapter 22: Cognitive and Neurological Evidence of Nonhuman Animal Mathematics and Implications for Mathematics Education
22.1 Introduction
22.2 Cognitive Research on Animal Mathematics
22.2.1 Numerical Discrimination
22.2.2 Basic Mathematical Competence
22.3 Neurological Research on Animal Mathematics
22.3.1 Number Neurons
22.3.2 Similar Brain Signatures
22.4 Discussion: Animal Mathematics Matters for Mathematics Education
22.5 Conclusion
References
Part V: Concluding
Chapter 23: Living in the Ongoing Moment
References
Index
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Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo · Bronislaw Czarnocha · Maurício Rosa · Małgorzata Marciniak   Editors

Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education

Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education

Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo Bronislaw Czarnocha Maurício Rosa • Małgorzata Marciniak Editors

Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education

Editors Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo Mathematics Department São Paulo State University Campus of Rio Claro Rio Claro, Brazil Maurício Rosa Department of Teaching and Curriculum Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Bronislaw Czarnocha Mathematics Department Hostos CC City University of New York New York, NY, USA Małgorzata Marciniak LaGuardia Community College Long Island, NY, USA

ISBN 978-3-031-35208-9    ISBN 978-3-031-35209-6 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The publisher, the authors, and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. This Springer imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature Switzerland AG The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland Paper in this product is recyclable.

Preface

Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education approaches the philosophy of mathematics education in a forward movement, analyzing, reflecting, and proposing significant contemporary themes in the field of mathematics education. It furthers the proposal of The Philosophy of Mathematics Education Today, edited by Paul Ernest, published by Springer, in 2018. The book contains many articles presented and discussed at ICME 13, within TSG 53, Philosophy of Mathematics Education, which took place in Hamburg, Germany, in 2016. Besides those articles, the editor, Paul Ernest, invited other authors to contribute relevant work in the field. This book, Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education contains work presented and discussed during the ICME 14, which took place in 2021 in Shanghai, China, within TSG 56, whose main objective was to focus on the relationship between the philosophy of mathematics and mathematics education. Its goal was to characterize the interaction and dialogue between these areas, including what can be highlighted when one uses the methodology of philosophical research to question the ontology, epistemology, or ethics of mathematics regarding mathematics education, or conversely when one unveils the philosophical outreach of mathematical ideas, concepts, or methodologies, especially in an educational context where mathematical practices may be worked through teaching and learning processes. ICME 14 was a hybrid event, that is, some people participated in person, others remotely. The event should have taken place in 2020, with all participants on site. However, that became impossible in view of the pandemic that plagued humanity between 2019 and 2020. The original date was thus postponed to July 2021. During the closing section of the activities of TSG 56, the participants proposed that a book be published in order to compile the articles discussed during the activities of TSG. As a TGS 56 Team Member, I have taken on the task of organizing such book in collaboration with Bronisław Czarnocha, Maurício Rosa, and Małgorzata Marciniak. It is important to point out that, as ICME 14 had been scheduled to take place in 2020, the Team Members of TSG 56 were different from those who took over the organization of ICME 2021. For several reasons, all of the members of that v

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team were unable take on TSG 56 in 2021. I, also for health reasons arising from having contracted Coronavirus, also could not continue as chair. Bronisław Czarnocha graciously accepted the position, and then I acted as co-­ chair to help him with the articles derived from work conducted previously. With this new structure, the work of TSG 56 was successfully conducted. The chapters comprising this volume present studies conducted by the authors who participated in the Topic Study Group that focused the theme “Philosophy of Mathematics and Mathematics Education,” one of the activities that took place during the International Congress of Mathematics Education  – ICME 14, 2021, in Shanghai, China. Also, in this volume, there are chapters written by guest authors and relevant researchers who study this subject on the international scene. The theme that gives life to the book is philosophy of mathematics education understood as arising from the intertwining between philosophy of mathematics and philosophy of education which, through constant analytical and reflective work regarding teaching and learning practices in mathematics, is materialized in its own discipline, philosophy of mathematics education. This is the field of investigation of the chapters in the book. The book aims to present to teachers and scholars of the philosophy of mathematics and mathematics education current investigations and didactic proposals by authors who conduct their activities in different countries. As editor and co-editors, we have managed all the organization, sent invitations, and established schedules for the work necessary so that the book could materialize. We collaborated with the authors as follows: each of the co-editors conducted the revision of a number of chapters; each of the authors revised one of the chapters; Reviews 1 and 2 (R1 and R2) were sent to each respective author, keeping in mind that after considering the observations they could accept or reject them. Each one of the co-editors then conducted a third review of the chapters and implemented the necessary adjustments in cooperation with the authors. The principle that guided the inclusion of chapters was the book’s own proposal, previously known by authors. Through our reading and analyses, we focused on the philosophical and educational discussion present in the texts and respective foundations, as well as the internal coherence and logical clarity of the articulations made. We do not take a position on the ideas presented and articulated in each chapter, as we understand that their maintenance is the responsibility of the respective authors. The different chapters are organized into four parts, which deal important themes concerning the philosophy of mathematical education: Part I – A Broad View of the Philosophy of Mathematics Education; Part II  – Philosophy of Mathematics Education: Creativity and Educational Perspectives; Part III – Philosophy of Critical Mathematics Education, Modelling and Education for Sustainable; Part IV  – Philosophy of Mathematics Education in Diverse Perspectives, Cultures, and Environments. Those parts are introduced through an exposition of the understanding of the themes treated, written by one of the editors of the book. Each part is presented below with the sequence of chapters it comprises, the respective author(s), and a brief summary through which the ideas considered are articulated.

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 art I – A Broad View of the Philosophy P of Mathematics Education 1 

Paul Ernest

“The Ontological Problems of Mathematics and Mathematics Education” represents a movement in the process of understanding the constitution of mathematical objects and of the mathematician himself, moving beyond the epistemological aspects present in this constitution and focusing on the deontic modality. According to this author, contrary to the traditional view that accounts of mathematical objects are in epistemic or alethic modality expressing possibility, prediction, and truth, the deontic modality of mathematical language indicates an obligation that becomes a necessity. The chapter presents a synthesis of the author’s understanding of Mathematics Education, of Mathematics, of Education, pointing out the great disciplinary fields that are interwoven in the constitution of Mathematics Education and presenting its readers with his comprehensions of important and diverse subjects, object of specific disciplines, such as Psychology, Linguistics, Sociology. The authors he mentions are important in the scenario of Philosophy and Mathematics Education.

2  Michael Otte and Mircea Radu Otte and Radu, in “Scientific Revolutions: From Popper to Heisenberg,” compare several seminal interpretations of Thomas Kuhn’s theory of scientific revolutions such as those of Karl Popper (1902-1994) and Werner Heisenberg (1901-1976), emphasizing two theses of particular importance for the analysis they present. The first states that theories are always underdetermined by the data they are supposed to represent, so that theories appear as realities of their own. The authors explore how this thesis can be upheld and proved fruitful while avoiding a nominalist interpretation. The second thesis concerns a favorite commonplace in philosophical and historical discussions of Renaissance. It states that the key element of the Renaissance was recognizing the individual human subject as the central agency of cultural, social, and economic progress. While discussing Kuhn’s conception and its reception, they explore some of the implications of these theses for a better understanding of the debates concerning the development of science, mathematics, society, and indeed education to this day. In this context, it is explained how aesthetic experience emerges as a fundamental ingredient capable of bridging the gap between theory and practice, nature and culture, between individual and social generality, and even between the two theses proposed above. The discussion developed by them proceeds in terms of Peircean semiotics.

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Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo

Bicudo, in “Questions That Are at the Core of a Mathematics Education Project,” presents an essay focused on those questions. The author emphasizes that the project of mathematics education needs to work by realizing philosophical thinking. This chapter outlines a way of understanding the production of mathematics, as understood by the western civilization, and its role in the constitution of scientific and technological thinking present in the world we live in today; it points out the urgency of not succumbing to the loss of meaning of life and of the world, as we are immersed in a sea of explanations and predictions issued and supported by the scientific and technological apparatuses; it is evidenced that mathematics education can contribute to the accomplishment of this task in a unique manner, which is critical and urgent for humanity. In this chapter, a list of themes defined as important and worthy of study and practice is not pointed out. Rather, the arguments intertwined conduct an analytical and reflexive way to exercise and point out understandings regarding the characteristics of scientific and technological work, which is supported by mathematics as understood by the western civilization, defending the premise that within the scope of mathematics education it is necessary to comprehend such characteristics and integrate them into educational practices with ways other cultures work mathematically.

4  Thomas Hausberger and Frédéric Patras In chapter “Networking Phenomenology and Didactics: Horizons of Didactical Milieus with a Focus on Abstract Algebra,” the authors work with Husserlian horizons intertwined with notions from Brousseau’s Theory of Didactical Situations (TDS). They present these as tools to analyze the shifts of attention and interconnectedness of knowledge in learners attending to an abstract structure. Then, they go forward in order to encompass a larger spectrum of horizons and methods in a pioneering application in the context of university mathematics education, allowing for a fine-grain analysis of the work of learners engaged in the elaboration of a structuralist mathematical theory around the given structure. At the theoretical level of frameworks, they contribute by combining/coordinating notions from TDS with the perspective of phenomenology, in the spirit of networking. They believe that such a dual framework may be applied in a large variety of contexts and educational levels.

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Jonh Mason

“Specifying, Defining, Generalizing and Abstracting Mathematically All Seen as Subtly Different Shifts of Attention” by John Mason focusses on mathematical abstraction as a process, in relation to specifying, defining, and generalizing. In the wake of his earlier investigations concerning symbols (signs), when he suggested in 1980 that these entities could be experienced initially as abstract in the sense of being unconnected to other experiences, but over time could become perfectly confidently manipulable, as they were concrete entities, and later, in 1989, when he suggested that abstracting mathematically involves a “delicate” shift, not so much in what is attended to, but in how it is attended to, he has led to point out implications for choices of pedagogical actions to initiate when working with learners. In this chapter, he moves on and proposed that the acts of specifying, defining, and generalizing also involve delicate shifts of attention, subtly different from each other and from abstracting. He argues that through the use of multiple examples, readers are invited to refine the distinctions they make in the form of their own attention, so as to work more effectively with learner attention.

6 

Steven Watson

“Toward a Systems Theory Approach to Mathematics Education” by Steven Watson presents a systems approach to thinking about mathematics education. It is an important text where the author aims to introduce mathematics education as a social system to contemporary systems theory. As he states, he outlines some features of the theory itself and the directions and themes which he takes up in his preliminary inquiry into mathematics education. According to him, systems theory facilitates the understanding of the social and cognitive dimensions within a theory of society and, from this, a theory of mathematics education, as a social system of communication.

7 

Gerald A. Goldin

Goldin in chapter “On Mathematical Validity and Its Human Origins” suggests the desirability of a fully integrated philosophy of mathematics education that builds on several distinct, mutually compatible foundational pillars. These pillars have their intellectual bases in different philosophical school of thought. The discussion focuses on one aspect of those epistemological foundations – the interplay between the human origins and uses of mathematics, and its objective truth and validity. Various philosophical trends in education have centralized just one of these aspects, often to the extent of denying or dismissing the other. He argues for their

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compatibility, maintaining that objective mathematical truth and the fact of culturally situated human mathematical invention should both be guiding teaching and learning, with neither diminished in importance. Several meanings given to the “why” of mathematics are discussed – logical and empirical reasons that underlie mathematical truths and relationships, sociocultural and contextual reasons for developing and teaching mathematics, and the in-the-moment experiences that afforded students to motivate their study. Some sources of cultural relativism, historical change, and “fallibility” in mathematics are identified, and the value of “mistakes” in powerful mathematical problem solving is highlighted. His goal is to argue that an intellectually sound philosophy of mathematics education must incorporate all of the aforementioned features of mathematics and its practice, dismissing none.

 art II – Philosophy of Mathematics Education: Creativity P and Educational Perspectives 8 

Bronisław Czarnocha

“Towards a philosophy of creativity in mathematics education,” by Bronisław Czarnocha, addresses a rarely explored area, philosophy of creativity and its relevance to mathematics education. The central question of this chapter – “What can the practice of and research in creativity of mathematics education contribute to the philosophy of creativity in mathematics education and possibly to the philosophy of creativity in general?” – guided the author’s presentation and argumentation. The innovative contributions made in the chapter are pertinent to the discussion about creativity, how to define it, how to measure it, how to work with it in mathematics classes.

9  William Baker In the chapter “A Framework for Creative Insights within Internalization of Mathematics,” William Baker analyzes cognitive changes during moments of insight realized within a math classroom. He makes his argument explicit by pointing to previous studies by authors significant to the subject, such as Piaget and Vygotsky. He poses that constructivism is arguably the prevailing theory of mathematics educational research; based upon the work of Piaget, it posits that human knowledge is built up through an individual’s reflection and abstraction upon their solution activity. He continues saying that social constructivists, in contrast, frequently use the work of Vygotsky focused on the internalization of knowledge within social discourse. In this chapter, Baker takes up these approaches and integrates them into a framework based upon the work of Koestler to study and analyze

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cognitive changes during moments of insight realized within a math classroom. Two dominant themes underlying his attempt are: first, classroom discourse is the unit of analysis for both student development and reflection upon pedagogy, and second, Vygotsky’s framework while ideally situated for analysis of classroom instruction is lacking in detail of the actual process of internalization.

10 

Mitsuru Matsushima

Mitsuru Matsushima’s chapter “A Reconsideration of Appropriation from a Sociocultural Perspective” pursues the following questions: Why does interaction in the learning community deepen mathematics learning? How does individual learning contribute to the learning community through dialogue and deepen mathematics learning? He works out with these questions from a sociocultural perspective, considering them jointly. In this chapter, he offers a reconsideration from a sociocultural perspective, basing his discussion on two appropriation features of previous studies, dynamic composition and mutual composition, and an extended sign appropriation and use model. He deepens his investigation about the concept of internalization and articulates ideas in order to answer the questions posed by him: “Why does dialogue deepen mathematics learning?” and “Will mathematics learning deepen without dialogue?”.

11  Regina D. Möller and Peter Collignon “Towards a Philosophy of Algorithms as an Element of Mathematics Education” is the theme focused by the authors in this chapter. They consider that nowadays the concept of algorithms is used in a rather broad range, since many subject matters refer to this notion, and they shape it along the respective desired usefulness or requirements. They argue that algorithms are one of several fundamental mathematical ideas, and they structure the content of math classes throughout the school years, that is, the primary and the secondary levels. They ponder that their roles and their importance for mathematics education have undergone substantial changes especially during the last 30 years. They understand that these changes give reason to investigate and reflect upon this emerging phenomenon and ask for analyzing the contemporary need in actual math classes as a response to everyday life experiences related to algorithms often hidden in technical devices. They go further in the line of their investigations and in this chapter, from a philosophical point of view, they pursue new questions to be considered within the framework of (post-)modernism and within a constructivist approach.

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Małgorzata Marciniak

Marciniak in “The times of transitions in the modern education” points toward expanded professional development for teacher education, in that she understood that living and working during these times of transitions in the modern education may be extremely confusing for teachers of all levels since the education they received and were taught to provide is not what they are required to perform. As she says, this was particularly exposed during the pandemic when thousands of teachers worldwide were forced to teach remotely regardless of their digital skills. She considers the questions of the character and shape of this development remains open, and so in this work she tries to analyze a few pivoting moments in the history of education to follow up on the ideas of Thomas Kuhn as presented in his book The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Here the discussion is applied to the structure of the revolutions of education with the pandemic being one of them. The question: what will be the long-term influences of the pandemic on the teaching and learning, remains open and fully credible answers can be provided only with time. She will try to answer this question based on short-term recent experiences and observations. Weaving articulations between Kuhn’s thinking about scientific revolutions and educational theory is an important point in this chapter.

13  Yenealem Ayalew “Some Examples of Mathematical Paradoxes with Implications for the Professional Development of Teachers” addresses some clever mathematical paradoxes that challenge or trouble traditional interpretations of mathematical results; it uses examples as evidence for the underlying argument. For instance, it elaborates the sum of one and one with possible results 0,1,2,3,10, or ∞. The discussions were made based on an eclectic position of the philosophies of mathematics. A question on the possibility of bringing qualitative mathematical relations into classroom context is posed in the middle of the text. Generally, the chapter deals on what creative imagination looks like, at the level of mathematics, mathematics teaching, mathematics teacher education, etc. Thus, it appears to be a theoretical exploration of the subjectivity of mathematical development and the professional development of mathematics educators. A multi-stage collaborative work model is also forwarded.

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 art III – Philosophy of Critical Mathematics Education, P Modelling and Education for Sustainable 14 

Ole Skovsmose

Skovsmose’s chapter, “A Performative Interpretation of Mathematics,” suggests a performative interpretation of mathematics, inspired by a performative interpretation of language. The author states that according to this interpretation, any form of mathematics is intrinsically linked to potential or actual actions. His interpretation, as he says, is elaborated upon with respect to both advanced mathematics and school mathematics. He highlights that any kind of mathematics exercises a symbolic power, which brings to the forefront the ethical dimension of a philosophy for mathematics. Any kind of action is in need of ethical reflections, and so specifically are mathematics-based actions. He points out that ethical reflections concern the possible impact of mathematics, the different groups of people that might be affected by such actions, the possible acting subjects that might be hidden behind the curtain of mathematics, the possible intentions behind the action, and the ethical reflections themselves. He concludes that, taken together, ethical reflections concern how symbolic acts rooted in mathematics might form our life-worlds.

15  Nadia Stoyanova Kennedy The chapter “Reflective Knowing in the Mathematics Classroom: The Potential of Philosophical Inquiry for Critical Mathematics Education,” by Nadia Stoyanova Kennedy, brings philosophizing to the very activity of teaching and learning mathematics. The text explains how to understand the process of philosophizing, which includes analytical and reflective thinking about issues concerning the way of producing mathematical knowledge, advancing to questions of ethical and epistemological nature. The author proposes ways for the teacher to work in the classroom with her students, keeping the dialogue alive in a collaborative way. The advance goes beyond the clear explicitness of the understanding of philosophizing, as it goes into the details of how and what can be worked out in the classroom.

16 

Uwe Schürmann

Schürmann, in chapter “Mathematical Modelling: A Philosophy of Science Perspective,” questions the separation between mathematics and reality or the “rest of the world,” which is often found in mathematics education research on modelling, against the background of the syntactic and the semantic view of models and theories. He argues that the syntactic view more accurately captures the connection

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between mathematics and reality by distinguishing between theoretical and observational terms of a theory. Moreover, as he points out, the distinction provides a tool to analyze students’ utterances more precisely. He links (analytic) philosophy of science and mathematics education research on mathematical modelling in the classroom. He does so because as this subject matter is not directly related to philosophical findings on models in sciences, it is not directly concerned with questions of a philosophical nature. Even so, it always deals with reality and so it carries underlying ontological questions.

17  Hui Chuan Li In the chapter “Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) in Mathematics Education: Reconfiguring and Rethinking the Philosophy of Mathematics for the 21st Century,” Hui Chuan Li discusses the disparity between the current trends in mathematics education and Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) approaches. The author argues toward a call for reconfiguring and rethinking the philosophy of mathematics for twenty-first-century learning priorities, as he detected a stalemate between ESD educational propositions and the growing trend in mathematics education toward teaching to the tests, which has become an increasingly common phenomenon in many education systems across the world.

 art IV – Philosophy of Mathematics Education in Diverse P Perspectives, Cultures, and Environments 1 8  Antonio Miguel, Elizabeth Gomes Souza and Carolina Tamayo “Asé o’u toryba ‘ara îabi’õnduara!”. In this chapter, the authors aim to problematize the alleged uniqueness and universality of Western logical-formal mathematics and the philosophies that support it with the purpose of deconstructing this belief as a problem, and not exactly defending a new philosophy of mathematics or mathematics education, but a therapeutic-decolonial way of educating and of educating oneself mathematically through the non-disciplinary problematization of normative cultural practices. They argue that any practice aimed at fulfilling normative social purposes in a way of life can be seen as a mathematical language game in Wittgenstein’s sense. And that, by extension, the mathematical practices, and the ways in which they affect the different forms of life in the contemporary world, must be the focus of the therapeutic problematization of a mathematics education that intends to be decolonial. Six persons participate in this therapeutic debate: Oiepé, Mokoi, Mosapyr, Irundyk, Mbó, and Opá kó mbó. Their names correspond,

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respectively, to the numerals one, two, three, four, five, and ten in the ancient language Tupi, today considered one of the two most important linguistic branches of the hundreds of different languages currently spoken by indigenous communities in Brazil. Other remote interlocutors are invited to participate in the debate.

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Maurício Rosa

In the chapter “Mathematics Education and Ubuntu Philosophy: The Analysis of Antiracist Mathematics Activity With Digital Technologies,” Maurício Rosa investigates how mathematics education can encourage/provoke the understanding/constitution of social responsibility of mathematics teachers and students, specifically, in relation to social issues such as structural racism that inhabits our reality, including educational ones. His research question is: How does one discuss racism in a mathematics class with Digital Technologies in a way that mathematical concepts support the discussion? This investigation he conducts is guided by his understanding that currently, from the polarization of worldviews, it is important that education with mathematics teachers highlights the political and social dimensions of this form/a(c)tion, so that mathematics is a reflective resource, language or field of study articulated with Digital Technologies (DT) and with questions related to these dimensions. Given these considerations and their questioning, he analyzes a mathematical activity with Digital Technologies that discusses colorism, and uses the African philosophy called Ubuntu as an analytical resource, which does not conceive the existence of a being independent of the other, but of a “being” who thinks, acts and lives with others, be-being, that is, a becoming-being that promotes a transformation in reality from its agency with others, with nature, with life. As he points out, he found interesting pedagogical possibilities, which under a decolonial perspective demarcate equity and social justice arising from a class that takes DT and mathematics as a basis.

20  Min Bahadur Shrestha “Philosophy, Rigor, and Axiomatics in Mathematics: Imposed or Intimately Related?”. In this chapter, Min Bahadur Shrestha shows his movement to examine how philosophy, rigor, and axiomatics are related, as he was motivated by the two main tendencies of mathematical development in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, which he understands as having to do with rigor and formalization. He argues that rigor and formalization took place on axiomatic basis leading to more abstraction and that Euclidean type of an axiomatic model became a model of mathematics even for constructively developed analysis. He goes on to point out his reasoning, arguing that although rigor and axiomatic method differ, and rigor does not need to be based on axiomatic method, in practice, that basis has been required for

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mathematical validity. He observes that among different interpretations made about it, some have explained it as a mathematical necessity, while others have attributed it to the philosophical underpinnings of formalism and foundationalism. From these arguments, he goes on to clearly state his argument by pointing out that, for him, it seems that philosophy has distant but decisive impression on the nature of mathematical knowledge, whereas rigor and axiomatic seems to be relatively internal to mathematics. However, because such trends have mostly been associated with European tradition, he argues, they need to be examined in the light of non-­European traditions, including Hindu mathematical traditions, which have made significant contributions to mathematics without any axiomatic proof or philosophical presumption of absolute certainty.

21  Karla Sepúlveda Obreque and Javier Lezama Andalon In the chapter “Idealism and materialism in mathematics teaching, an analysis from the socio epistemological theory,” the authors aim to reflect on the influence of idealism and materialism, as philosophical currents, on the school curriculum and the work of teaching mathematics. They take social epistemological theory as the theoretical framework to guide their reflection, as well as to analyze the information obtained through direct observation and unstructured interviews with Chilean teachers.

22 

Thomas E. Ricks

In the chapter “Cognitive and Neurological Evidence of Non-Human Animal Mathematics, and Implications for Mathematics Education,” Thomas Rick focuses on a challenging issue for the mathematics educator Community. He reviews recent scientific evidence legitimizing animal mathematics. He states that, in particular, numerous cognitive and neurological studies suggest that animals mathematize like humans. Such findings run counter belief held by many in mathematics education that mathematics is a uniquely human enterprise. He concludes by suggesting possible benefits animal-mathematics studies may hold for the work of mathematics education.

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Part V – Concluding 23 

Bronisław Czarnocha and Małgorzata Marciniak

“Living in the Ongoing Moment” is a summarizing chapter. Czarnocha and Marciniak, co-editors of this book, wrote it as a moment of reflection on the topics brought by the authors in the current, just assembled book and a sudden, yet somehow expected, appearance of an advanced AI chatbot. Having no answers, they keep asking questions hoping that they will serve as an inspiration for more philosophy so much needed in mathematics education today. São Paulo, Brazil November 2022

Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo

Introduction

Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education approaches the philosophy of mathematics education in a forward movement, analyzing, reflecting, and proposing significant contemporary themes in the field of mathematics education. The four parts that comprise the book share this view of the themes that interpret the investigative procedures and studies, as well as the didactic-pedagogical practices conducted in the area. Although the four parts are dedicated to specific subjects, the themes treated are intertwined and often displayed as oppositions, feeding the dialectic of thought that questions and seeks analyzes which significantly support arguments that advance, either through clarification, or proposals for new topics to be researched, or educational proposals. We are a group of four researchers who dedicated ourselves to organizing this book, since ICME 14, which took place in 2021 in Shanghai, China. Four different people with different views. However, the four remain united by the common goal of bringing to the community of mathematics educators the diversity and strength of the ways of understanding mathematics and mathematics education, through critical and reflective analyses, present in the different papers discussed by TSG 56. Thus, we believe that it is difficult or even impossible to amalgamate these four voices. Therefore, we decided that each of us, in their own way of thinking and explaining their understandings, would be responsible for presenting the introduction to one of the parts with which they were most familiarized, due to their own investigations and areas of interest. These presentations materialized as a brief text called “Introducing the theme of Part X.” Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo wrote the introduction to Part I; Bronisław Czarnocha wrote the introduction to Part II; Małgorzata Marciniak wrote the introduction to Part III; and Maurício Rosa the introduction to Part IV. The parts are presented below as well as the respective introduction of the themes covered, in order to expose the reader the logic of the organization of such parts which evidences our way of seeing the content of different chapters.

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Introducing the Theme of Part I In this first part of the book, we take a comprehensive look at mathematics education, resulting from philosophical thinking regarding what is understood by the authors of the different chapters in this book, which are proposed for analysis and reflection by those who operate such education. The topic addressed in this part focuses on essays developed by their authors based on extensive investigations and debates that have taken place throughout their lives, while they immerse themselves in the philosophy of mathematics education. Proposals are presented regarding possible ways of understanding mathematics education, based on work already published but considered for reflection within the horizon of mathematics education. While reading them, I feel they go deep into topics already clarified and reviewed, advancing toward contributing with views that are articulated in organic units and involve more complex levels, seen from the perspective of a theorization work. It is a movement that demonstrates the commitment to lead mathematics education beyond the aspects concerning themes regarding teaching and learning mathematics, when, for example, learning theories and proposals for ways of teaching are brought up, as well as topics related to the history of mathematics, philosophy, education, and other significant issues for this area, seeking to penetrate the intricacies of the ontological, epistemological, axiological aspects lying at the core of philosophy. The discipline imposed by the rigor of this search contributes to an attitude of constantly questioning the sense and meaning of what is said, both in one’s authorial productions and those published in this area. Questions are asked, such as: What does this text say about education? About mathematics education? About mathematics? About teaching? About knowledge? About scientific knowledge and natural knowledge? About ways to critically understand scientific production? About ethical and aesthetic aspects that are shown between the lines of texts, research, and practices experienced among mathematics teachers and researchers? Why teach mathematics to all people, in the manner it is inserted in the school curricula of the Western world societies in recent centuries? In what direction should one go when performing mathematics education, that is, from a teleological point of view, what are the purposes assumed as valid, in order to guide the realization of this education? Questions of this kind underlie the texts presented in this Part I and are treated in a unique way by different authors. The diversity of views and authors mentioned is evident in the chapters presented. Likewise, there is diversity of paths traveled toward the theorization pointed out above. This shows the strength of the area that is revealed from multiple perspectives. It is important to point out that all authors perform a rigorous exercise committed to issues which are central to philosophy, whether naming them explicitly or not. The logic of the sequence of chapters goes from broader questions placed through reflections of the author’s own work, moving on to texts that intertwine, in an articulated way, different philosophies of important authors such as Thomas Kuhn, Karl

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Popper, and Werner Heisenberg, to authors who assume specific philosophical views, such as phenomenological and hermeneutic views, understood as critical for the movement of philosophically thinking mathematics education; as well as texts that focus on actions specific to human knowledge, with emphasis on mathematical knowledge, emphasizing abstraction as a process, and explaining actions that perform this process, such as specifying, defining, generalizing, abstracting mathematically; including texts that highlight the importance of analyzing and understanding mathematical education from the perspective of a system; and also a text that argues that an intellectually sound philosophy of mathematics education must incorporate various philosophical trends in education without centralizing just one of their aspects while denying or dismissing others. These chapters challenge readers and invite them to follow the paths of the thought exposed, certainly raising other questions, and thinking from the perspective of their own pursuits and concerns.

Introducing the Theme of Part II Part II develops beginnings of the philosophy of creativity in mathematics education. It contains three chapters which concern creativity directly and three chapters which touch upon it tangentially. All of them contribute to our understanding of this fundamental yet elusive phenomenon of creativity. In this short introductory section, we explicitly focus on that common thread. At the same time, we discover interesting connections between the chapters which suggests new questions to the emerging Philosophy of Creativity in Mathematics Education (PCME). PCME is the emerging subdomain of consideration within our profession, which we hope will provide us with hints when, where, and how we can facilitate students’ creativity and through its expression let them experience its power both along the cognitive and affective dimensions. Creativity and innovation have become the buzz words within the professional business circles. Against that background, Bronislaw Czarnocha’s chapter “Towards a Philosophy of Creativity in Mathematics Education” addresses rarely explored area, philosophy of creativity and its relevance to mathematics education. The central question of this chapter – “What can the practice of and research in creativity of mathematics education contribute to the philosophy of creativity in mathematics education and possibly to the philosophy of creativity in general?”  – guided the author’s presentation and argumentation. Through the bisociation that is the theory of Aha! Moment, seen here as the act of creation following Koestler (1964), the author arrives at the conclusion that creativity should be at the basis of mathematics curriculum design. Regina Möller and Peter Collignon’s chapter “Towards a Philosophy of Algorithms as an Element of Mathematics Education” arrive at a similar assertion but from the point of view of the role of algorithms in mathematics education. The authors point to the dramatic change in that role occurring within last several decades, both in our profession as well as in the world. As an introduction to the subject, the authors provide an

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interesting historical sketch, which includes the description of the recent changes, which employed algorithms is daily life, in particular in electronic calculators and computers. The contemporary user however, doesn’t know about the existence of the algorithms at all. The main issue in question is about the impact of algorithms on math classes and phenomena that were completely unknown until recently. Since those new possibilities involve fascinating opportunities and enormous threats at the same time, the authors assert that the concept of algorithms should be in the center of didactical considerations. And that brings philosophical/didactical question: Both proposals, to organize the curriculum with creativity at its base and with the algorithm at the center of didactic attention, when implemented together lead us to the philosophical question: What is the relationship between creativity and an algorithm, or creativity and a procedure? Following on its heels comes the didactic question: How do we organize classroom teaching based on these two, ultimately antithetical concepts? Equally interesting relationship exists between William Baker’s chapter “A Framework for Creative Insights Within Internalization of Mathematics” and Mitsuru Matsushima’s chapter “A Reconsideration of Appropriation from a Sociocultural Perspective” both of which include a similar goal but approach it from a different, one could even say, opposite points of view. The goal is to identify creative process, creativity within sociocultural approach. Baker supports himself by a recently created concept of integrated bisociative frame grounded in Piagetian constructivism and Koestler’s bisociation, and he shows the existence of such frames within internalization. That clarifies where and how creativity is found within internalization. Bisociative frame is one of the central concepts of the creativity theory of Aha! Moment presented in the Czarnocha chapter; it plays the role of the “discoverer” of creativity. Baker’s efforts in the chapter are the continuation of Baker (2021), where the coordination of bisociation with Piagetian constructive generalization led to the formulation of the integrated bisociative frame – a new tool to identify moments of creative insight within student learning. Identification of such integrated bisociative frames within both Piagetian and Vygotskian approaches is very important. It suggests that a bisociative creativity underlies both of the approaches and can serve as their unifying principle. Moreover, the discussion of the close relationship between interiorization  – the characteristics of Piagetian approaches – and internalization – the characteristic of Vygotskian approach – culminates the chapter. Matsushima’s chapter “A Reconsideration of Appropriation from a Sociocultural Perspective” pursues the following questions: Why does interaction in the learning community deepen mathematics learning? He addresses two fundamental questions within the sociocultural approach: Why does interaction in the learning community deepen mathematics learning of its members? How does individual learning contribute to the learning community through dialogue and deepen mathematics learning? The chapter approaches the common goal of identifying creativity through the sociocultural vantage point of appropriation. He uses the newly introduced concepts of dynamic composition and mutual composition during the process of

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appropriation between an individual learner and the community of learners to identify three problems within internalization showing at the same time how these new concepts can deal with the described difficulties. And creativity is found possible during the appropriation as a deviation from the original concept to be appropriated. Such deviations are a manifestation of gaps between the concepts of the learners interacting with each other and the concepts of the learning community as seen by each learner. That means that bisociative frame is created by two different frames of reference of individuals between whom the deviation takes place. Creative imagination of our profession is the common aspect of Ayalev and Marciniak chapters, especially seen at their sociocultural background. While for Ayalev it is the principle of the proposed professional development for teachers, for Marciniak it is the reality of the rapid transformation from face-to-face to online mode. She points out to several published reports from the time of pandemic which emphasized the critical role of creative imagination in the rapid transformation for which majority of teachers and students were not prepared. The chapter of Małgorzata Marciniak “The Times of Transitions in the Modern Education” addresses very deep revolutionary changes in education that are taking place at present due to the impact of pandemic as well as due to the growth of the role of Internet. The author recalls the incredibly high speed with which both teachers/faculty and students had to change the mode of teaching and learning from face-to-face to online Internet platforms. The process of change included significant difficulties for students, parents, and teachers leading ultimately to lowering students’ passing rates, yet at the same time, it offered significant creative possibilities. Creativity involved in solving presented problems, when integrated with the creative possibilities of Internet, may signal that creativity itself is becoming the central underlying feature of contemporary pivotal point in education. The author places that present moment as the most recent pivotal point within a sequence of similar pivotal revolutionary changes in education’s history: introduction of compulsory education, transformation from religious to secular schooling, and creation of public education. She points to the fundamental role of education of females brought by the paradigm of public education. Yenealem Ayalev’s chapter “Some Examples of Mathematical Paradoxes with Implications for the Professional Development of Teachers” investigates the relationship between mathematics, teacher, and education as the basis for the professional education of teachers. He emphasizes that vital component of that relationship is creative imagination. He advocates the socio/cultural approach to creative imagination, and especially in the context of mathematical paradoxes, whose both posing and solving invokes large dose of creativity. The author finds the essence of mathematics as the science of computation and operation, as the provision of skills to learn and create shared meanings by way of socializing the field of mathematics. An excellent example of that multi-meaning which can be attributed to one mathematical concept leads the author to the analysis of known mathematical paradoxes, which through history have led to many creative ideas and discoveries. One of them has been the 5th postulate of Euclid whose many possible meanings have led to the creation of non-Euclidean geometries. Another one is the collection of different interpretations and solutions to “1 + 1 = ?”, which

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illuminate the role of interpretation as well as existence of multiple truths in mathematics.

Introducing the Theme of Part III Young children often ask for the purpose of live, but when discouraged, they stop and engage in other activities. Similarly, young researchers frequently inquire about the meaning of mathematics and its place in education. But when the answer is not found, they tend to shift to other, more rewarding topics. In this part of the book, the authors stubbornly search for the answers of revised and reformulated questions about the meaning of mathematics, its place in education and reality. Unfortunately, mathematics is nowadays taught as the universal and unquestionable truth not responding to the needs inquisitive and future oriented minds. Even college students of engineering programs frequently express their surprise when they find out that their teachers do research in mathematics beyond what is already known. In modern mathematics, classroom logicism, formalism, and intuitionism are already well-established dimensions. In his chapter, Ole Skovsmose finds ways for expanding these dimensions and introduces performative interpretation of mathematics as a niche in mathematical ethics. He justifies the needs for adding this new dimension to the contemporary mathematics as a crucial factor in creation of the life-world. In his works, performative interpretation based on mathematical results plays a key role in creating reality. At the same time, Skovsmose points out the new roles of mathematical algorithms in political, social, and financial decision making on a large scale and emphasizes the urgent needs for ethical discussions about such uses. It is worthwhile to mention that the aspects of ethics in terms of performative interpretation go far beyond well-known mathematical literacy (sometimes called numeracy) denoted by further authors as mathemacy. Ole gives an example of how formalism (language) affects the discussion using mathematical modelling. In his view, a choice for a particular model shapes the discussion, for example about climate change and affects the conclusions. No doubts, the way the data is cleansed, analyzed, and used is important for the future shape of our global society. The fact that the language influences the content of conversation is well known to bilingual people. While it may be intuitively clear that the choice of language shapes spoken or written exchange of ideas, this may be less obvious for pure wordless thinking. Especially when we would like to see thinking as a process is entirely owned by us. But surprisingly so, some, thoughts, including mathematical thoughts are highly dependent on the language. Practical classroom applications of performative interpretation in mathematics classroom are described in the chapter written by Nadia Stoyanova-Kennedy. She suggests that inquiry joined with collaborative group work may be the best way for creating a suitable environment for critical and creative thought. Stoyanova-­ Kennedy points out that the role of math in the society has been unclear. On the one

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hand, math skills are valued and used in many aspects of human life (banking, decision making, cryptography, coding, etc.), but on the other hand, students of all ages and nationalities fear math and often sincerely dislike it. This leaves math educators in a century-lasting dilemma of how to connect mathematics with happy feelings and natural interactions of humans with the reality. Here mathemacy comes as a rescue as it is designed to build interactions between the mind and the reality. At the same time, Stoyanova-Kennedy warns that mathemacy, if engaged only for technical or mathematical understanding, will not contribute to the growth and development of modern society. Thus, she calls for well-framed and properly facilitated classroom discussions that aim for building ethical and social awareness of students of all ages. Stoyanova-Kennedy gives an example of discussion about mathematical modelling which could contain questions of the type: Should a model describe reality with a prefect precision? Why mathematical models are need? Can they describe everything? How do we know how much to trust them? Uwe Schürmann notices that even in courses about mathematical modeling, calculations are heavily overrepresented not leaving any time and attention for such fundamental epistemological and ontological questions crucial for the role of models in creating reality. He points serious shortages in such courses: • Lack of empirical experience of mathematical modeling, i.e., collecting the data, finding the parameters of the models, comparing the results from the models to the actual outcomes, and explaining the obvious existence of discrepancies • Social separation: Who builds the model and for what purpose, how are the results used and with what intentions? • Ontological separation: How does the model contribute to existing view of nature, for example, one differential equation tends to appear in many different areas and describe unrelated phenomena, pendulum equation describes not only vibration but level of sugar and insulin, what does it mean to science? How does this discovery contribute to our view of reality? Education with such separation will not create responsible citizens prepared for challenges of the future. Thus, mathematics education urgently needs a revision in its paradigms. Hui-Chuan Li brings as an option UNESCO-supported ideas of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) which has three aspects: economic growth, social inclusion, environmental protection. He emphasizes that in mathematics curriculum, these aspects may not be actual topics. But they should influence the way of implementation of math topics in the class activities. Li gives an example of own research topics related to ESD introduced as workshops for his students in Scotland. Topics include biodiversity, climate change, and sustainable energy (wind turbines and biodiesel) and the workshops contain non-traditional activities such as: respectful debates and discussions, reflections, sharing opinions, and points of view of the value of mathematics and its limitations. At this point, Li rightfully rises another issue for discussion related to testing in math classes. As he points out, standardized testing influenced teachers to focus on teaching just for these tests supporting the opinion that the style and content of testing affects the way of teaching. Opposite holds as well, i.e., the style of testing should mirror the teaching. Thus,

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bringing discussions and debates to the curriculum should influence the way of testing. In my own teaching experience, written reflections on mathematical results rescued validity of online testing during the pandemic. This experience significantly changed my view on tests and testing in math courses. As a conclusion, STEM education has been drawing increasing attention as it became more politically relevant due to its role in technology and decision making needed for the future workforce. Mathematics curriculum makes attempts to accommodate such needs by introducing problem solving, which, in Li’s opinion, is insufficient for preparing students to become critical citizens of future reality. Thus, at the end of his chapter, Li calls for culturally and ethnically sensitive mathematical teaching.

Introducing the Theme of Part IV Part IV of this book brings chapters that deal with the philosophy of mathematics education in different perspectives, cultures, and environments. This means that the chapters that make up this part undertake to discuss, to reflect, to reflect on, for example, colonial mathematics problematizing the supposed singularity and universality of this western logical-formal mathematics and these philosophies that sustain it for the purpose of deconstructing the belief of a single and universal mathematics as a problem. Therefore, highlighting the ways of doing mathematics of different peoples, valuing it, is a movement that arises as a potential restorative of the historical invisibility of different cultures. In this perspective, the conception of culture is understood as a whole way of life, its common meanings, to designate the arts, learning, the processes of discovery, and the creative effort (Williams, 2015). Also, according to Eagleton (2003), based on the etymological meaning of the word that comes from the Latin colere, the term culture is used to designate distinct things such as habitation (in the words “colony” and “colonist”) and religious worship (“worship”). It is also used to manual labor. The original meaning of word “culture” is “crop” or “agricultural cultivation” and, thus, what previously designated a particular material activity, takes an abstract meaning, which is imposed as the general cultivation of the intellect, in the individual sense and also in the collective. Thus, this part of the book highlights the ideas of freedom and determinism, activity and resistance, change and identity, what is given and what is created (Eagleton, 2003) in the mathematical production of different peoples and environments and what can be taught to empower mathematical doing and equity of human beings. Therefore, the philosophy of mathematics education in various cultural perspectives, for example, seeks the individual and collective growth of what has already been cultivated or that will be, either by itself or by the group to which one belongs, in a dialectical movement between what is said natural and what is said artificial, according to rules agreed by the group itself, and between what we do to the world and what the world does to us in an inseparable flow, which presents itself in proper act of educating by mathematics.

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This part of the book assumes possibilities of defense in a decolonial way of educating mathematically and educating by mathematics through the non-­ disciplinary problematization of normative cultural practices. The discussion of how mathematics education can stimulate/provoke the understanding/constitution of the social responsibility of teachers and mathematics students is raised. Specifically, in relation to social issues such as structural racism that inhabits our reality, including educational, there is a movement that highlights the African philosophy Ubuntu, evidencing ways in which mathematics can sustain the understanding of respect for the collective. The chapters promote reflection on decolonial ways of educating by mathematics. Thus, some interesting mathematical practices are pointed out, which from a decolonial perspective demarcation equity and social justice and can be performed in recurrent educational spaces. Nevertheless, the understanding that Hindu mathematical traditions, for example, have made significant contributions to European mathematics even without any axiomatic proof (of the way these tests are (im)put by the coloniality of knowledge) or philosophical presumption of absolute certainty (likewise), can raise empowerment flights to various groups of students from minorities (black) in mathematical educational spaces. In Latin American terms, there is a movement around social epistemology as a theory of educational mathematics. This epistemology studies didactic phenomena related to mathematical knowledge, assuming the legitimacy of all forms of knowledge, whether popular, technical, or formal, because it considers that they, as a whole, constitute human wisdom. Also, as an innovative perspective, this part of the book presents a discussion on recent scientific evidence that legitimizes the mathematics of animals. Cognitive and neurological studies are indicated that suggest that animals mathematize like humans and this destabilizes the common belief that mathematics is an exclusively human enterprise. However, the disarticulations of universal truths are present in this part of the book, because, although the meanings we attribute to a given situation or object are individual and subjective, they have their origins and their importance in the culture in which they are created. Therefore, in this cultural locus is the guarantee of negotiation and communication of these senses in order to characterize meanings (“agreed” or “(im)posed”). What matters, in cognitive terms is that meanings become the basis for cultural exchange. In the symbolic systems of culture, there is a possible realization of what is understood together and what can be communicated in terms of eurocentrical ideas. Thus, this part of the book seeks to debate issues that do not fit, at first, into a formal, academic, white, and Eurocentric mathematics. In other words, there is no framing of diverse mathematical thoughts in an order of hegemonic and European structure, because these different mathematical forms of thinking are outside the characteristics of rigor and axiomatic proof, previously conceived in history by the dominant culture. However, the proper mathematical way of thinking of the dominant culture is philosophically questioned and other forms are discussed in the subsequent chapters of this part of the book. These debates, in turn,

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open different possibilities from those commonly defended and potentiate knowledge that can often be considered as decolonial ways of thinking. At the end, concluding the treatise on the different parts of the book, there is Chap. 23, understood as a reflection on the topics brought up by the authors. It is an essay in which two of the co-editors, Dr. Czarnocha and Dr. Marciniak, carry out a review of the book, highlighting its unity understood as based on philosophical thinking and the way of proceeding of the Philosophy of Mathematics Education, projecting inquiries visualized in the horizon opened by the AI chatbot. Rio Claro, Brazil New York, NY, USA Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Long Island, NY, USA

Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo Bronisław Czarnocha Maurício Rosa Małgorzata Marciniak

Contents

Part I A Broad View of the Philosophy of Mathematics Education  1 T  he Ontological Problems of Mathematics and Mathematics Education��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������    3 Paul Ernest  2 S  cientific Revolutions: From Popper to Heisenberg ����������������������������   43 Michael Otte and Mircea Radu  3 Q  uestions That Are at the Core of a Mathematics Education “Project” ��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������   63 Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo  4 N  etworking Phenomenology and Didactics: Horizon of Didactical Milieus with a Focus on Abstract Algebra����������������������   87 Thomas Hausberger and Frédéric Patras  5 S  pecifying Defining, Generalising and Abstracting Mathematically All Seen as Subtly Different Shifts of Attention��������  103 John Mason  6 T  oward a Systems Theory Approach to Mathematics Education ������  125 Steven Watson  7 O  n Mathematical Validity and Its Human Origins������������������������������  141 Gerald A. Goldin Part II Philosophy of Mathematics Education: Creativity and Educational Perspectives  8 T  owards a Philosophy of Creativity in Mathematics Education ��������  163 Bronisław Czarnocha

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 9 A  Framework for Creative Insights Within Internalization of Mathematics ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������  183 William Baker 10 A  Reconsideration of Appropriation from a Sociocultural Perspective������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������  209 Mitsuru Matsushima 11 T  owards a Philosophy of Algorithms as an Element of Mathematics Education����������������������������������������������������������������������  227 Regina D. Möller and Peter Collignon 12 T  he Times of Transitions in the Modern Education ����������������������������  239 Małgorzata Marciniak 13 S  ome Examples of Mathematical Paradoxes with Implications for the Professional Development of Teachers��������������������������������������  253 Yenealem Ayalew Part III Philosophy of Critical Mathematics Education, Modelling and Education for Sustainable 14 A  Performative Interpretation of Mathematics������������������������������������  269 Ole Skovsmose 15 R  eflective Knowing in the Mathematics Classroom: The Potential of Philosophical Inquiry for Critical Mathematics Education��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������  293 Nadia Stoyanova Kennedy 16 M  athematical Modelling: A Philosophy of Science Perspective����������  309 Uwe Schürmann 17 E  ducation for Sustainable Development (ESD) in Mathematics Education: Reconfiguring and Rethinking the Philosophy of Mathematics for the Twenty-First Century��������������������������������������  331 Hui-Chuan Li Part IV Philosophy of Mathematics Education in Diverse Perspectives, Cultures, and Environments 18 A  sé O’u Toryba ‘Ara Îabi’õnduara!������������������������������������������������������  351 Antonio Miguel, Elizabeth Gomes Souza, and Carolina Tamayo Osorio 19 M  athematics Education and Ubuntu Philosophy: The Analysis of Antiracist Mathematical Activity with Digital Technologies����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������  381 Maurício Rosa

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20 P  hilosophy, Rigor, and Axiomatics in Mathematics: Imposed or Intimately Related? ������������������������������������������������������������  409 Min Bahadur Shrestha 21 I dealism and Materialism in Mathematics Teaching: An Analysis from the Socio-­epistemological Theory����������������������������  429 Karla Sepúlveda Obreque and Javier Lezama Andalon 22 C  ognitive and Neurological Evidence of Nonhuman Animal Mathematics and Implications for Mathematics Education����������������  443 Thomas E. Ricks Part V Concluding 23 L  iving in the Ongoing Moment��������������������������������������������������������������  461 Bronisław Czarnocha and Małgorzata Marciniak Index������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������  467

About the Contributors

Javier  Lezama  Andalón  obtained PhD in Educational Mathematics from the Center for Research and Advanced Studies (Cinvestav del IPN, Mexico). Member since 2011 of the National System of Researchers, Level 1; Regular member of the Academy of Scientific Research of Mexico. From 2000 to 2021, research professor of the Postgraduate in Educational Mathematics, postgraduate in the “online” distance modality at the Center for Research in Applied Science and Advanced Technology (CICATA of the National Polytechnic Institute. Currently a visiting professor of the Postgraduate in Teaching of Mathematics of the Faculty of Mathematics of the Autonomous University of Guerrero, Mexico. https://orcid. org/0000-0002-3574-6406 William  Baker  He is a professor at Hostos Community College of CUNY.  He received his PhD in Mathematics from The Graduate School and University Center, CUNY in Algebraic Topology. He has authored and co-authored with members of a teaching research team of faculty several chapters integrating creativity theory with constructivist learning theory, as it applies to moments of insight within the classroom learning environment. This work built upon early work by the research team of Czarnocha, Prabhu, Dias and Baker titled “The Creative Enterprise of Mathematics Teaching Research”, published in 2016 by Sense Publishers. In this earlier work, Koestler’s notion of bisociation is synthesized with the most elementary type of reflective abstraction, referred to as interiorization. The resulting integrated framework for analyzing “Aha” Moments within learning, we refer to as an “emerging bisociative frame”. In this current work, this integrated frame is extended to include moments of insight within social learning environments best described by Vygotsky’s internalization. https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4655-2989 Maria  Aparecida  Viggiani  Bicudo  is a professor of Philosophy of Education. Received her bachelor’s at Pedagogia Licenciatura from the University of São Paulo (1963), bachelor’s at Pedagogy from the University of São Paulo (1963), master’s at Educational Advisement from the University of São Paulo (1964) and doctorate at Education Science from Philosophy, Science and Letters Faculty of Rio Claro xxxiii

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(1973). She has experience in Education, focusing on Philosophy of Education, acting on the following subjects: education, mathematics education, phenomenology, qualitative research, philosophy of mathematics education. Her research includes over 200 publications and over 10,500 citations. https://orcid. org/0000-0002-3533-169X Peter Collignon  studied Mathematics with minors in physics and economics at the University of Bonn, Germany. In the diploma degree, his focus was on stochastic topics such as Markov decision processes. After non-university activities at the Federal Institute of Hydrology and the Rhine State Library in Koblenz, he took lectureships in business mathematics and operations research at the University of Cooperative Education Thuringia as well as private educational institutions and collaborated on projects in social science informatics at the University KoblenzLandau, Germany. There he worked for two years in teacher training, which he continued in 2003 at the University of Erfurt, Germany, as a research and teaching associate. From 2017 to 2019, he was a substitute professor for Mathematics Education at the University of Koblenz-Landau. Current research interests are related to scientific theoretical aspects of mathematical modeling of social science and economic topics. https://orcid.org/0009-0003-2675-6885 Bronisław  Czarnocha  is a professor of Mathematics at Hostos Community College of CUNY. Received his PhD in Mathematical Physics and Mathematical Foundations of Quantum Mechanics at Yeshiva University, New York City, with his dissertation: “States in Separable Algebras”. His interest in investigations of learning developed through practice of teaching led him to formulate the TeachingResearch NYCity methodology; he is the editor of Mathematics Teaching-Research Journal online. At present, his research interests center on the creativity of Aha!Moment and its role in learning through the development of concepts. He has published around 50 papers in Mathematics Education and 4 books in the area, the most recent Creativity of Aha! Moment and Mathematics Education (edited together with William Baker) by Brill |Sense Publishers. https://orcid. org/0000-0002-2182-5277 Yeanealem Ayalew Degu  is an assistant professor of Mathematics Education at Kotebe University of Education (KUE), Ethiopia. Yenealem is interested in and has been working on philosophy, creative imagination, ethnomathematics, teacher education, career development, qualitative research, geometry, topology and discourse. His publications address a variety of topics. For instance, his books Transformation Geometry and Preparatory Mathematics could be mentioned as exemplary works. Before joining KUE, Yenealem had been a secondary school mathematics teacher and Education Office Vice Head at Dejen Woreda (2004-2007). He also served as member of Ethical Board, organizer of conferences, organizer of “Mathematics Forum” and “Olympiad”, presenter of Seminars, Trainer and Academic Program Officer at Dire Dawa University (2009–2022). Yenealem is promoting profiles of Ethiopian Science and Mathematics Educators on social Media. In summary, he

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expresses himself as teacher, writer, trainer, coordinator, organizer, host, volunteer and leader. https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4553-3874 Paul Ernest,  after studying Mathematics and Philosophy at Sussex and London Universities, taught mathematics in a London comprehensive school in the 1970s. He lectured in Mathematics Education at Homerton College, Cambridge, De Montfort University, Bedford, and the University of the West Indies, Jamaica. Dr. Ernest was appointed to the University of Exeter in 1984 where he was promoted as the first ever professor of the Philosophy of Mathematics Education in 1998. Currently his position is that of emeritus professor. At Exeter, he established and ran the innovative blended learning doctoral and master’s programs in mathematics education. He has served as visiting professor in Trondheim and Oslo, Norway and Liverpool Hope and Brunel University and examined doctorates in scores of countries worldwide. His research explores questions at the intersections of philosophy, mathematics and education, including ethics and the social and critical dimensions of mathematics and mathematics education. His research was cited in more than fifteen thousand scholarly publications. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7985-2852 Gerald  A.  Goldin  is a distinguished professor of Mathematics Education, Mathematics and Physics at Rutgers University. His research includes over 200 publications, embracing these three fields. He directed several major STEM education projects, including New Jersey’s Statewide Systemic Initiative and “MetroMath: The Center for Mathematics in America’s Cities”. He is a recipient of the Humboldt Research Prize for work in quantum physics. His current educational research focuses on affect and engagement in mathematical learning and problem solving. He also co-authored (with Jennifer T. Doherty) two illustrated storybooks for young children, The Mouse of Gold (2006) and The Fierce and Gentle Wolf (2011), published in Scotland by Serafina Press. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5422-9690 Thomas  Hausberger  is holding an associate professorship in Mathematics Education at the University of Montpellier, France. After an early career where he contributed to the Langlands program in pure mathematics, he turned to research in university mathematics education, of which he is an internationally recognized expert. He is one of the coordinators of the International Network for Didactic Research in University Mathematics (INDRUM). His research interests include teaching and learning of mathematical structuralism in advanced mathematics; Klein's second discontinuity (the transfer of advanced mathematical knowledge to knowledge useful for the high school teacher); relationships between didactics and epistemology of mathematics; mathematics-­science interdisciplinarity. Also, he is involved in the activities of the international study group on the relations between History and Pedagogy of Mathematics (HPM), in the community of Philosophy of Mathematics Education, and he is developing joint research programs in Philosophy and Didactics of Mathematics in France. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6013-1975

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Nadia  Stoyanova  Kennedy  is an associate professor at the Department of Mathematics, New  York College of Technology, City University of New  York (CUNY). Between completing her master’s and doctoral degrees, she spent 15 years as a full-time high school mathematics teacher, curriculum developer and student teacher mentor. She serves regularly as a consultant for the International Baccalaureate (IB) program on curriculum, assessment and examiner training. Her research interests center on philosophy of mathematics education, dialogic teaching, teacher professional identity and teacher professional learning, with a particular emphasis on critical approaches to mathematics education and on the promotion of philosophical dialogue in the mathematics classroom. https://orcid. org/0000-0003-3810-0237 Hui-Chuan Li  is a lecturer in Mathematics Education at the Moray House School of Education and Sport, University of Edinburgh, UK. Received her PhD from the University of Cambridge, UK, in 2015 on “A Problem-Based Learning Approach to Developing Fifth Grade Students’ Fraction Sense in Taiwan: Challenges and Effects”. Her current research interests lie in the field of mathematics learning and teaching in both primary and secondary education, with a focus on classroom interaction and teacher professional development. She also has a long-standing interest in investigating the impact of mathematics curriculum on students’ opportunity to learn mathematics, from an international comparative perspective. Published 17 papers. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8116-5269 Małgorzata  Marciniak  is an associate professor at the LaGuardia Community College of CUNY and the Managing Editor of the Mathematics Teaching Research Journal. She received her PhD in Mathematics from Missouri University of Science and Technology with dissertation “Holomorphic Extensions on Toric Varieties”. Her current work splits among pure mathematics, applied mathematics and education. She has been studying ends of topological spaces and mathematical simulations of efficiency of flexible solar panels. She is interested in applications of theories of creativity in the classroom and has already published numerous articles about this subject. https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3090-6113 [orcid.org] John  Mason  spent 40 years at the Open University. Currently, he continues in retirement to work on mathematical problems, to develop applets to help himself and others appreciate and comprehend mathematical concepts. Having written the equivalent of 10 or more books for the Open University on Mathematics Education, John is perhaps best known as lead author of Thinking Mathematically, in print since 1982 and described at the time of the first edition as a “classic” text. He spent some 20 years articulating a way of working on oneself with colleagues (The Discipline of Noticing), trying to capture the essence of Professional Development and the ways of working used in the Centre for Mathematics Education at the Open University, and based on what he learned from J. G Bennett who was a mathematician, mystic and Teacher. He assembled Fundamental Constructs in Mathematics

About the Contributors

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Education as support for teachers of mathematics who wanted to turn their concerns into research at master’s level and beyond. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6079-4322 Mitsuru  Matsushima  is a professor of Mathematics Education at Kagawa University in Kagawa Prefecture, Japan. He holds doctorate in Education. For the past 20 years, he has been a teacher at elementary and junior high schools and special needs education schools. He is currently studying the realization of equity in mathematics education and the philosophy of mathematics education, but he already has investigated some themes: Research on class culture that fosters co-agency through dialogue in mathematics learning; Constructing interaction models for dialogue and extracting principles of lesson design to deepen mathematics learning; Theory and practice of mathematics lesson design to deepen mathematics learning for all children; A study on the development of deductive reasoning skills in the upper grades of elementary school to reduce the gap in mathematics; and Study on lesson design of jigsaw learning method in mathematics education. https://orcid. org/0000-0002-8520-0321 Antonio Miguel  is a retired professor at the Department of Teaching and Cultural Practices, Faculty of Education, the State University of Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil. At this university, he is a full researcher and carries out investigations in: therapeutic-decolonial studies in interdisciplinary school (mathematics) education; therapeutic-decolonial historiographies of mathematics and mathematics education; philosophy of mathematics and mathematics education. The main authors of reference that constitute the field of dialogue for the development of these investigations are Ludwig Wittgenstein and Jacques Derrida. The methodical attitude that has been guiding these investigations is the therapeutic-deconstructionist one. He was a founding member of the Study, Memory and Research Circle in Mathematics Education (CEMPEM/FE-UNICAMP), the Zetetiké Journal, the HIFEM Research Group (History, Philosophy and Mathematics Education) and the PHALA Interinstitutional Research Group (Education, Language and Cultural Practices). https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7156-8291 Regina D. Möller  studied Mathematics at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany, with a minor in physics and graduated with a diploma. She then graduated from the Studienseminar in Mainz, Germany, taking the first and second state examinations in Mathematics and Physics. This was followed by a doctorate in Mathematics Education at the University of Würzburg, Germany; and she also completed her habilitation at the University of Koblenz-Landau. Regina Möller taught at the College of the University of Maryland (European division) and was a research assistant at the University of Düsseldorf. Furthermore, she worked as an academic councilor at the Chair for Didactics of Mathematics at the University of Würzburg, Research Assistant at the Department of Mathematics / Computer Science, German Institute for Distance Learning, University of Tübingen and as an academic senior counselor at the Mathematical Institute of the University of Koblenz-Landau. Then she taught as C3-Professor at the University of Erfurt, Germany. She was an editor

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of several class books and journals on mathematics education. Currently she teaches Mathematics Education at Humboldt University, Berlin. https://orcid. org/0009-0001-5096-8306 Karla  Sepúlveda  Obreque  is a Primary School Teacher and Secondary School Mathematics Teacher. She works at the Center for School Research and Development at the Catholic University of Temuco, Chile. She holds a PhD degree in Mathematics Education from Instituto Politécnico Nacional, Mexico City. Her dissertation was about Teacher’s epistemology on mathematical knowledge under the socioepistemological study. Her work lines are: socioepistemology, didactics of mathematics, curriculum in its implicit and explicit dimensions, as well as research in educational mathematics and the figure of the teacher. She has given 17 presentations discussing teacher's preparation. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2397-1999 Michael Otte  is a professor emeritus at the Department of Mathematics, University of Bielefeld/Germany. In 1967, he obtained a doctoral degree in mathematics with the minor subject of German literature and literary criticism from the University of Göttingen. The title of his mathematical doctoral dissertation was “Beiträge zur Theorie der komplexen Liegruppen”. From 1973 to 2003, he has been a co-director of a Central Research Institute on questions of mathematical education and related subject areas (Mathematics, History and Philosophy of Mathematics, Psychology). In 2005, Springer Science + Business Media published a volume Activity and Sign (M. Hofmann, J. Lenhard and F., Seeger, eds.) on the occasion of his retirement, which contain sample information about his scientific activities. https://orcid. org/0000-0001-9248-1312 Frédéric  Patras  is CNRS senior research scientist (Directeur de Recherche) at Université Côte d’Azur; he has to his name around 100 research articles in algebra, probability and its applications, mathematical physics and philosophy of mathematics. He wrote two books on the philosophy of mathematics (The Essence of Numbers, Springer 2020 and Contemporary Mathematical Thinking, Springer 2023) and one in algebra together with Pierre Cartier (Classical Hopf Algebras and their Applications, Springer 2021). He holds a PhD in Mathematics from Université Paris Diderot. He is Editor-in-Chief of the Annals of Mathematics and Philosophy, Editor of the Annales de l’Institut Henri Poincaré D. Combinatorics, Physics and Their Interactions, Journal of Interdisciplinary Methodologies and Issues in Science and of EpiDEMES. He is a co-organizer of the research network PhilMathMED. The webpage http://math.unice.fr/patras/ shows a complete list of his publications. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8098-8279 Mircea Radu  has an MA in Mathematics from the University of Bucharest (1985). PhD in mathematics education from the University of Bielefeld (2000) with a thesis concerning a series of major contributions to axiomatics in mathematics, philosophy and mathematics education during the nineteenth and early twentieth century. His research focusses ever since on related topics, exploring the mutual links

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between mathematics education, the history of mathematics and of mathematics education, philosophy of mathematics and axiomatics. Mircea Radu’s work experience includes both mathematics teaching as well as research on curriculum development and on topics like the one mentioned above. He presently teaches mathematics at the Oberstufen-Kolleg des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen in Bielefeld, Germany. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0337-4281 Thomas  E.  Ricks  is an associate professor with Tenure and holds a Graduate Faculty Status at the School of Education, College of Human Sciences and Education, Louisiana State University. His PhD is in Mathematics Education from the University of Georgia, 2007, and his master's degree is also in Mathematics Education from Brigham Young University, 2003. He has published over 35 papers, and given many international presentations. Dr. Ricks’ research interests include mathematics and science education teaching and learning, teacher preparation, complexity and international cross-cultural comparisons, particularly between the USA and mainland China. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5409-0089 Maurício Rosa  is a professor at the Faculty of Education, Department of Teaching and Curriculum and at the Post-Graduate Program in Teaching of Mathematics at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. He holds a post-doctorate from Rutgers University, New Jersey, USA, and from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ, Brazil). He received his PhD in Mathematics Education at São Paulo State University – Unesp – Rio Claro (SP) (2008), Master in Mathematics Education (2004) from Unesp too and Graduated in Mathematics Education from Lutheran University of Brazil (ULBRA) (2002). He participated in Doctoral Program with Internship Abroad at London South Bank University, London (UK). He has experience in Mathematics, with an emphasis on Mathematics Education, working mainly on the following fronts: Digital Technologies, Distance Education, Electronic Games, Role Playing Game (RPG), Philosophy of Mathematics Education, Teacher Education, Decolonial Mathematics Education and ­ Exclusion/inclusion in Mathematics Education (racism, homophobia, transphobia etc.). His research includes over 120 publications. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9682-4343 Uwe Schürmann  works on his dissertation project on “Philosophical and epistemological perspectives on modeling”. Since 2021, he has been appointed as a lecturer at the Faculty of Educational Mathematics and Its Disciplines in Northwestern Switzerland. So, he is a lecturer at the Institute of Primary Education, chair of Mathematics Didactics and Its Disciplines, PH Northwestern Switzerland. Also, he was pedagogical assistant at the State Institute for Schools in North RhineWestphalia in the Department of Educational Research, Evaluation, School Quality, School Development and Scientific Cooperation; half-time secondment to university service at the University of Münster with a focus on comparative work in grade 8 (Vera-8 mathematics); and research assistant at the Institute for Didactics of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Münster. https://orcid. org/0009-0003-2288-9824

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Min  Bahadur  Shrestha  is interested in the significance of mathematics in the light of its nature and structure; he worked on geometry education focusing on secondary school proof geometry. In the later years, he has been interested in the philosophy of mathematics education. He received his PhD in Mathematics Education from Panjab University, Chandigarh, India, 2005; MEd (Mathematics Education, 1987) and BEd (Math and Science, 1978), Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal. He has been a professor/associate professor/lecturer/assistant lecturer (from 1979 to 2018) working as a part-time teacher and thesis supervisor in Graduate School of Education, FOE, at the Faculty of Education (FOE), Tribhuvan University, Nepal. He wrote about two dozens of articles/papers in the field of mathematics education and philosophy of mathematics published in national and international journals. Books – Ganit Darshan (The Philosophy of Mathematics, 2013) published by Nepal Academy, Kathmandu, Nepal. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2789-2876 Ole  Skovsmose  has a special interest in critical mathematics education. He has investigated the notions of landscape of investigation, mathematics in action, students’ foreground and pedagogical imagination. He is professor emeritus at the Department of Culture and Learning, Aalborg University, Denmark, but is now living most of his time in Brazil. He has published several books. Received his PhD in 1982 from the Royal Danish School of Educational Studies (mathematics education). Dr. scient. 1995 from Aalborg University. From 1982 associate professor at Aalborg University. From 1996 professor in Mathematics Education at The Royal Danish School of Educational Studies. He has been member of the committee directing the projects “Mathematics Education and Democracy” (1988-1993). Together with Celia Hoyles and Jeremy Kilpatrick, director for BACOMET-4 project. Co-director of the research program: Curriculum, Learning and “Buildung” for the 21st Century, Royal Danish School of Educational Studies. Co-director of The Centre for Research of Learning Mathematics, a co-operative project between Roskilde University Centre, Aalborg University and The Danish University of Education. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1528-796X Elizabeth  Gomes  Souza  holds a PhD in Teaching, Philosophy and History of Sciences by Federal University of Bahia-Brazil. Professor at the Faculty of Mathematics and Scientific Education and the Postgraduate Program in Science and Mathematics Education of the Federal University of Pará (UFPA), Brazil. Viceleader of the Group of Studies and Research in Mathematical Modeling – UFPA, Brazil. Coordinates the Mathematical Modeling Working Group of the Brazilian Society of Mathematics Education (2022–2024). Coordinates the Universal Project “The decolonial option in Mathematics Education” financed by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq  – Brazil). https://orcid. org/0000-0001-7119-0348 Carolina Tamayo-Osorio  holds degree in Mathematics and Magister in Education from the Universidad de Antioquia (UdeA, Colombia) and PhD in Education from the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP, Brazil). Professor at the Faculty of

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Education, Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG, Brazil). Member of the inSURgir Research and Study Group (UFMG), of the Education, Language and Practices Research Group (UNICAMP) and of the Mathematics, Education and Society Group (UdeA). Professor at master’s and doctoral level at the Postgraduate Program in Knowledge and Social Inclusion at UFMG. Research lines: Philosophy of mathematics education, education in the indigenous context, decoloniality since the global south and ethnomathematics. The main author of reference that constitute the field of dialogue for the development of investigations are Ludwig Wittgenstein, Jacques Derrida and Michel Foucault. Coordinator for South America of the International Ethnomathematics Network. Member of the Editorial Committee of the Latin American Journal of Ethnomathematics. https://orcid. org/0000-0002-8478-7845 Steve Watson  is an associate professor at the Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge. He is co-chair of the Knowledge Power Politics research cluster in the Faculty and is also the Editor in Chief of the Cambridge Journal of Education. His research draws on social systems theory, phenomenology and historical sociology in the context of media, policy and politics, knowledge and education; the sociology of STEM and mathematics education; and teachers’ professional learning. He holds degrees in Engineering and Educational Studies from the University of Cambridge, the Open University and the University of Nottingham. He also holds qualified teacher status with a Postgraduate Certificate of Education from the University of Sheffield. He has worked in retail, telecommunications and in state schools as a mathematics teacher prior to becoming an academic. https://orcid. org/0000-0003-4818-1472

Part I

A Broad View of the Philosophy of Mathematics Education

Chapter 1

The Ontological Problems of Mathematics and Mathematics Education Paul Ernest

1.1 Introduction Ontology is the branch of philosophy that studies the fundamental nature of reality, the first principles of being, identity and changes to being, that is, becoming. In this chapter, I want to explore being, existence and identity as they concern mathematics and mathematics education. In particular, I want to address the ontological problems of mathematics and mathematics education. The ontological problem of mathematics is that of accounting for the nature of mathematical objects and their relationships.1 What are mathematical objects? Of what ‘stuff’ are they made and do they consist? The ontological problem of mathematics education concerns persons. What is the nature and being of persons, including both children and adults? In the context of this chapter, I will restrict my attention to human mathematical identities, that part of being which pertains to mathematics, namely the mathematical identity of mathematicians and the developing mathematical identities of students. What are these mathematical identities and how are they constituted? Human beings are located in, and constituted through the cultures they inhabit, so my answer will encompass how these contribute to mathematical identities, as well. The twin ontological problems of mathematics and mathematics education concern the chief entities in the two domains. These are mathematical objects first, and second, persons, restricted to their mathematical identities. The structural similarity  I use the term nature without presuming essentialism or assuming ‘natural’ states of being. I shall answer the question of how the properties and characteristics of mathematical objects and human beings as mathematical subjects are inscribed within them as a process of becoming without the presuppositions of essentialism. 1

P. Ernest (*) School of Education, University of Exeter, Exeter, Devon, UK, EX1 2LU e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_1

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does not end with these parallel twin focuses of inquiry. In each of these two domains, there are dominant myths that must be critiqued or cut down before their respective problems can be addressed adequately. In mathematics, there is the myth of Platonism, namely that mathematical objects exist in some eternal, superhuman realm. According to this view, mathematical objects were there before we came along, and they will still exist after we are all gone. In mathematics education, there is the rather more hidden problem of individualism. This is the view that persons are all existentially separated creatures whose actions, learning and even whose being take place in hermetically sealed and separated personal domains. However, there is also dissimilarity in the treatments I can hope to offer. While I can aspire to giving an account of the nature of mathematical objects, I cannot hope to treat the nature and being of persons except in a very partial way. As I have indicated, I restrict my inquiry to those aspects of human being that pertain to learning and doing mathematics, and their personal foundations.

1.2 Mathematical Objects In this part, in a number of linked sections, I offer an attempt to giving an account of the nature of mathematical objects. I start by trying to clear some of the obstructive conceptual undergrowth that stands in the way of my account. In the exposition that follows on, all the elements that make up the social constructionist account of the ontology of mathematical objects are introduced and then summarized in Sect. 1.2.8.

1.2.1 Critique of Platonism According to Platonism, mathematics comprises an objective, timeless and superhuman realm populated by the objects of mathematics. These objects are pure abstractions, and they exist in an unchanging ideal realm quite distinct from the empirical world of our day-to-day living. Plato’s doctrine of Platonism locates other abstract ideals beyond mathematics such as Justice, Beauty and Truth, in this realm. Not surprisingly, the nature, status and location of abstract ideas has been a matter of debate at least since the time of Plato. The medievalists divided into the camps of nominalists (abstract objects are primarily linguistic names), conceptualists (abstract objects are ideas in our minds), and realists (abstract objects are real entities that are located in some platonic-like realm). All of these positions have their problems. Many of the greatest philosophers and mathematicians have subscribed to the doctrine of Platonism in the subsequent two plus millennia since Plato’s time. In the modern era, the view has been endorsed by many leading thinkers including Frege (1884, 1892), Gödel (1964), and Penrose (2004).

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Although I shall reject it, quite a lot is gained by this view. First of all, mathematicians and philosophers have a strong belief in the absolute certainty of mathematical truth and in the objective existence of mathematical objects, and a belief in Platonism is consonant with this and even validates this view. Platonism posits a quasi-mystical realm into which only the select few – initiates into the arcane practices of mathematics – are permitted to gaze, and within there – to discern mathematical objects and mathematical truth. Second, this view is a concomitant of, and validates purism, the ideology that mathematics is value-free and ethics-free. Human values are excluded by definition, for they cannot seep into or taint the hermetically sealed superhuman platonic realm, since it exists in another dimension. As I have recounted elsewhere, purism is an ideology that was strong in Plato’s time and then again in the nineteenth- and twentieth-century mathematics (Ernest, 2021a). Third, Platonism supplies mathematics with a theory of meaning. According to this theory, mathematical signs and terms refer to objects in this ideal realm. Likewise, mathematical sentences, claims, and theorems refer to true, or otherwise, according to their status, states of affairs and relationships between the constituent objects that hold in the Platonic realm. However, a distinction should be made between Platonism and mathematical realism. According to the latter, mathematical objects are real; they are something verifiably shared amongst many people. However, they do not necessarily exist in a superhuman and supraphysical realm. For example, as I shall argue, they can be social objects. However, developing a social theory of mathematical objects is more complex than simply positing a Platonic realm, which can be conjured, ready-made out of a hat. Explaining and validating a social constructionist theory of mathematical objects requires the development of conceptual machinery and to a certain degree, a suspension of disbelief, because Platonism has penetrated so deeply into our understanding of mathematics and universals. Platonism is not without its problems. Two major problems concern access and causality. How can mathematicians access the Platonic realm? With what faculties can they peer into it to discern its objects and truths? No such sixth sense is known unless one strays into the realms of the mystic and shaman. And even if one did stray there, and could discern mathematical objects and truths directly, what justifications could be given to others for the existence of the objects and the validity of the truths discerned? To say I saw it with my mind’s eye is not enough. Mathematical objects need to be accurately defined to be communicated, and mathematical truths need to be convincingly proven in public texts to be acceptable. So, their means of validation are just those that one would need even if there were no superhuman Platonic realm into which one could peer (Benacerraf, 1973). In terms of causality, there are problems both ways (Linnebo, 2018). How are newly defined concepts and newly proven results inserted into the Platonic realm? What is there about our inventions and discoveries that cause them to appear there? Plato argued these ‘new’ objects were there all along and we can only discern them when we have recreated them for ourselves. This is surely an unsatisfactory ad hoc answer. If we can only discern what we have recreated, why not dispense with the

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mystification and acknowledge we created them, in the first place? In the reverse direction, how can the truths of the Platonic realm causally determine outcomes in the material world? Why is pure mathematics so unreasonably effective in the real world? How and why are mathematical truths so real and so persuasive to children, students, and adults prior to demonstrations? I suppose that if mathematical truths hold in all possible worlds, then those found in the Platonic realm must hold in the material world. But this is not a causal argument implying that mathematical truths from the Platonic realm force their applications to hold in the physical world. Once again it leaves the Platonic realm superfluous. Although positing the Platonic realm as the home of mathematical objects and as a source for mathematical truths opens a number of serious problems, it remains a widespread, legitimate, and irrefutable view. Like many ideologies that posit other realms full of celestial beings it remains a matter of choice and belief. I choose to use Occam’s razor, the principle of ontological parsimony, that entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity. Extending this to the multiplication of ontological realms, I regard the expansion of mathematical ontology through the addition of the superhuman Platonic realm to be unnecessary. It creates new problems of access and causality. It represents a succumbing to the historical vice of Idealism. My claim is that socially based mathematical realism can accommodate many of the benefits of Platonism without all these extra costs. So, I reject Platonism while embracing mathematical realism.

1.2.2 Meaning Theory Above I acknowledge that Platonism supplies mathematics with a theory of meaning. According to this theory, mathematical signs and terms refer to objects and their manifested relationships in the ideal Platonic realm. Most simply, this is a referential or picture theory of meaning. Ernest (2018a) shows some of the inadequacies of this theory, which is also widely criticized elsewhere (e.g. Rorty, 1979). But if one is to reject this theory what is to stand in its place? If mathematical signs and words are not simply the names of objects in a Platonic realm how else can they signify? How can we offer a way to understand their meanings? In my view, Wittgenstein’s (1953) theory of meaning, according to which much of the meaning of words and other signs is given by their use, offers the best solution. With regard to meaning, Wittgenstein says that much of meaning is given by use: “for a large class of cases  – though not for all  – in which we employ the word ‘meaning’ it can be defined thus: the meaning of a word is its use in the language” (Wittgenstein, 1953, I, sec. 43). He allows for three other sources of meaning  – custom, rule-following, and physiognomic meaning (Finch, 1995; Cunliffe, 2006). Focusing on meaning as use, it is important to hedge this in the way that Wittgenstein does. Namely that the use of words or signs is always located within language games situated within forms of life. Thus, according to this theory, the meanings of words and signs are the roles they play within conversations located in social forms

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of life. But these are not free-floating conversations, they are conversations centered on, and intrinsically a part of, shared activities with a goal or object in mind. In one extreme case this might be conversing after dinner with friends with combined aims of sharing information (or gossip), consolidating relationships or just for the intrinsic joy of relaxing with friends and family. Such discussion, although perhaps capturing the popular meaning of the term ‘conversation’, is trivial and fails to reflect the central importance of conversation. Conversations are not just trivial decorations but an integral part of social activities. The function of conversations is to facilitate important joint and productive activities through directions, confirmations, and other means. The meanings of the terms and signs employed are their functions within these activities. Joint action within a form of life is usually directed and punctuated by discourse. In other words, language in conversation is a tool employed to further a joint activity and take it towards its goal. Indeed, the language used in productive material activities is as often imperative or interrogative as it is declarative. Such as in the kitchen: ‘stir this’, ‘is there enough salt in the sauce?’, and ‘this is tonight’s meal’. Where conversation is lacking in a joint activity, often custom and rules have been laid down conversationally in earlier manifestations of the form of life rendering repeated conversations and directions superfluous, so the joint activity can progress without verbal instructions or elaboration. Wittgenstein makes it clear that meanings depend on the language games in which they are used, and ‘When language-games change, then there is a change in concepts, and with the concepts the meanings of words change’ (Wittgenstein, 1969, sect. 65). Two other dimensions of Wittgenstein’s ideas of meaning, custom and rule-­ following, are also important. Cunliffe (2006: p. 65) points out that there are deontic dimensions of meaning entangled with the other uses, with widespread imperatives imposing or requiring rule-following, the meeting of obligations, lawfulness, and respect for customary usage. Language use is far from limited to the alethic mode – meaning that it encompasses epistemic, factual, and truth-orientated functions. It also commonly employs the imperative mode. This is very important when understanding the meaning of mathematical texts, where the imperative mode far outweighs the declarative or indicative modes, as an analysis of verb usage in the corpus of mathematical texts reveals (Ernest, 1998, 2018a; Rotman, 1993). I shall argue that the institutions of mathematics are held up by tacit or explicit rule-­ following and custom, so this dimension of meaning is very significant. Indeed, I hope to show that the very objects of mathematics are created and maintained by tacit agreements, rule-following, and embedded customs inscribed within the objects themselves. For example, to count you must follow a string of rules, but as counting skills develop, and numbers come into being as self-subsistent mathematical entities, then the rules and norms appear to dissolve or disappear into the perceived nature of the numbers themselves. But I get ahead of myself.

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1.2.3 What Are the Objects of Mathematics? Platonism and realism offer answers as to where mathematical objects are to be found (Skovsmose & Ravn, 2019). But apart from the fact that they are universals and abstractions, these ontologies do not tell us what the objects of mathematics are; they do not answer the question of what is the stuff of which they are made? Unfortunately, traditional ontology is not a lot of help here. It seems to be satisfied with a category of being, rather than a deeper inquiry into the very stuff or substance of the existents. What is needed is a multi-disciplinary approach that combines insights from philosophy of mathematics, mathematics itself, semiotics, cognitive science, psychology, sociology, linguistics, and mathematics education into the nature of mathematical objects. No one of these disciplines is sufficient of itself, as I intend to show, to satisfactorily answer the question: Of what stuff are mathematical objects made? There is another obstacle in the way of a naturalistic account of the ontology of mathematical objects, namely, the ideologies of essentialism and presentism (Irvine, 2020). In this context, essentialism presupposes that mathematical objects are made of some fixed stuff, analogous to diamonds or other precious stones, but existing in an eternal realm, where they are found to be permanent and unchanging. The ideology of presentism searches for answers to all questions in a timeless present, where there is no change, development, or becoming. In my view, ignoring Plato’s admission of ‘becoming’ into ontology, presentism underpins much of modern Anglo philosophy. There logical arguments are timelessly valid, and concepts presumed fixed and permanent. Where such properties are attributed to mathematical concepts and objects, they are presumed completed and there is no need to discuss how they came to be and how this shapes what they are. Becoming is ignored and disallowed. I think that to fully understand mathematical concepts and objects you need to know how they became as they are. Especially, as being abstractions, they have been abstracted from lower orders of abstractions or actions. Mathematical objects do not have a fixed essence, for they change over time, and they have different meanings in different contexts. Let me illustrate this with arguably the simplest of all mathematical concepts, the number one. This first appears in human history and in child development as the first word in a spoken count (‘one’, ‘uno’, ‘yek’, ‘tik’) or as the first tally in symbolically recorded counting. The number, or rather numeral, ‘one’ is the first ordinal in a counting sequence (meaning ‘first’). The early use of this numeral is enactive, with the action of pointing or making a mark accompanying its utterance. When the last ordinal number in counting out a set becomes defined as its cardinal number, the word ‘one’ or sign ‘1’ gains its cardinal meaning as the number one. Counting out a triplet with the ordinals 1, 2, 3 ends with 3 which by definition is its cardinality. Counting a singleton – ordinal one – results in cardinal one. This marks the arrival of the concept of one in its first rudimentary but complete form, the cardinal number one. At this stage in its development, number one is understood to be on a par with the other natural numbers 2, 3, 4, and so forth.

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It is important to notice that the concept of one is doubly abstracted. First from the physical action of counting, from tallying, or from just saying the number names out loud prior to counting. Second, once ordinal counting is mastered for small values, the cardinal number one is abstracted from the ordinal one, as comes to represent the value of a completed count. In tallying, strokes or marks are used to represent the outcomes of counts (e.g. ‘///’ representing the count of three. Each stroke is itself a part of a unit action and ultimately each of these units ‘one more’ is identified with ‘one’. The tally ‘///’ represents one (more) and one more and one more which is a compound way of representing three (via the ordinal ‘third’). In number systems, the numeral ‘1’ resembles a tally stroke. In several number systems, such as those of the Ancient Egyptians, Sumerians, and Romans, numerals made up of one, two, and three strokes (I, II, III, respectively) are used for the first few numbers representing both repeated ones and unit strokes in a tally. Studies of proto-language suggest that the early, possibly prehistoric name for one was ‘tik’, also meaning digit or finger (Lambek, 1996). Use of fingers for counting evidently goes back a long way, and this word for one also stands for a single digit (as finger). Indeed, the modern use of the word digit retains this ambiguity, standing both for individual numerical signs (1 to 9) as well as for any single finger. This is just the beginning of the development of the concept of one. The use of the sign ‘1’ becomes more elaborate within systems of numeration, calculation, and measurement. The numeral ‘1’ represents a unit in an abacus or place value system in compound numbers (one ten, one hundred, etc. indicated in decimal place value as 10, 100, respectively, with ‘1’ as an atomic component in a molecular sign). Subsequently, with the introduction of multiplication, one serves as the multiplicative identity element. As number systems and structures are extended, ‘1’ has different meanings and properties, across N, Z, Q, R, C. In Q, the numeral ‘1’ is used both in numerators and denominators. In R (and Q), ‘1’ is used in extended place value notation as a fraction of denomination ten to a negative power (e.g. 0.001 = 10−3). ‘1’ and other numerals are used in algebra, length measures (and indeed all measures), in fractions, extended place value notations, vectors, matrices, probability theory (representing certainty), Boolean algebra (representing truth). The property of ‘one’ as the multiplicative identity in Q, R, and C is generalized throughout algebraic structures such as groups, rings, fields (together with the more basic additive identity 0). In each of these different roles, ‘1’ has different uses and meanings, so its meaning can never be said to be fixed, but is always dependent on the context of use, on the background theory. Thus, the number one cannot be claimed to be a single fixed mathematical object or concept. However, what we can say is that the number one, like all Natural numbers, in its first emergence, is an abstraction of an action using signs. An instance of a counting action can be physical, such as touching individual members a set of objects (already conceptualized as countable units for the purposes of counting, Ernest, 2021b), while uttering the sequence of ordinal names. Or it can be conceptual where the units are counted without physical contact or

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movement. Either way the act of counting is an instance, a token of counting, corresponding to an abstracted type, the count. This count has an endpoint, a designated sign that represents the ordinal position of the last counted unit, which is abstracted as the number, the cardinality of the set counted. Thus, the resultant number, the cardinality is doubly abstracted from the instance of counting. First, as the type or class of the designated count. Second, as the cardinal number abstracted from the derived ordinal number. This simplest of all the numbers, ‘little’ number one, serves to show both how complex and multiply meaningful mathematical concepts are, as well as of what they are formed. ‘One’ begins as an action associated with a sign, which is then abstracted. The process is reified into an object. Virtually all named mathematical objects consist of abstracted operations or actions on simpler mathematical objects or actions.2 To enable a differentiation of levels into simpler/more complicated, one can posit a hierarchy through which the relation of ‘simpler than’ can be defined. The lowest level of mathematical actions (level 0) is made up of those that have a physical correlate, like counting or drawing a line. The lowest levels of mathematical objects (level 1) are abstractions of, or from, mathematical actions of level 0. A mathematical action of level n + 1 operates on actions and objects that include at the highest level those of level n. Likewise, a mathematical object of level n + 1 abstracts actions and objects that include those up to and including level n. What I have only exemplified in the case of ‘one’ is that there is a sign associated with every (named) mathematical action or object. Frequently, there are several signs. So, with one there is the spoken verbal name or word (in almost every language), a written verbal name (‘one’), and a mathematical sign (‘1’). In various arithmetics, there are in fact an infinite number of expressions with the numerical value of 1 that could also be called names for 1 (e.g. 22–21, 0 + 1). The signs of mathematics are of paramount importance. The signs not only help to create the objects of mathematics, but they are also entangled with them. Mathematical actions are typically actions on or with mathematical signs.

1.2.4 Mathematical Signs and Their Performativity In order to fully engage with the role of signs in mathematics, with the semiotics of mathematics, it is necessary to understand the performativity of mathematical signs. As syntactical objects, mathematical signs are both the objects acted upon and the crystallized residue of acts in themselves. In the first instance, all the ‘atoms’, the ur-elements of mathematical signing are performed actions. Thus, as we have seen, 3 represents the product of tallying III which is itself the residual mark of the repetitive physical act of counting one, two, three. In this way, counting employs

 Various scholars in mathematics education research make this point (Sfard, 1994; Tall, 2013; Dubinsky, 1991). 2

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indexical signing because each stroke or physical tally movement corresponds to a counted entity by proximity in space, time, or thought. Within semantics, the performativity of mathematical signs is ontological. The signs create their own meanings; the abstract objects of mathematics that they denote. What we have is a ‘a set of repeated acts within a highly rigid regulatory frame that congeal over time to produce the appearance of substance, of a natural sort of being’ (Butler, 1999, p.  43–44). Although Butler is referring to another domain, the process is identical for the construction of mathematical objects. Thus, numerals and number words ‘do not refer to numbers, they serve as numbers’ (Wiese, 2003, p. 5, original emphasis). This is an important point that contradicts any referential theory of meaning, including both the picture theory of meaning and Platonism. Numerals, number word terms, and by extension all mathematical signs need not indicate or refer beyond themselves to other objects as their meaning, let alone to a supraphysical and ideal realm of existence. They themselves serve as their own objects of meaning, coupled with the actions that they embody (and their inferential antecedents and consequents).3 Mathematical language is thus performative, for mathematical terms create, over time, the objects to which they refer. As I have argued, counting via abstraction is the basis for the creation of numbers, and likewise operations create mathematical functions. In the first instance, these are inscribed numerals and enacted operations. Repeated usage reifies and solidifies them into abstract mathematical objects.4 Furthermore, their currency of use serves as a social warrant for them, verifying their legitimacy and existence.5 Elsewhere I argue that mathematical signs are performative in two ways, which I term inner and outer. What I describe above is part of the inner performativity, whereby mathematical sign usage creates mathematical objects. The outer performativity of mathematics is the way it formats the way we experience and interact with the material world (Skovsmose, 2019, 2020; Ernest, 2019). I will not discuss this outer performativity further here (but see O’Halloran, 2005 and Ernest, 2018b).

 This has been used as an explicit strategy within mathematics. Henkin (1949) defines the reference of each sign within the system to be itself, in his classic proof of the completeness of the first-order functional calculus. 4  This is supported both within philosophy (for example, Machover, 1983) and empirically by research into the psychology of learning mathematics (Ernest, 2006; Tall, 2013). 5  In writing that signs create their own meanings, it is taken for granted and unwritten here that it is signs-in-use by persons that perform actions, for it is persons that use signs and create and comprehend meanings. 3

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1.2.5 The Constitutional Role of Social Agreement for Mathematical Objects Social agreements play a decisive role in the constitution of mathematical objects and the validation of mathematical knowledge. Such agreements may be tacit and are introduced both implicitly and explicitly through mathematical practices and everyday games and practices with young children. Before counting can even begin, the idea of separate objects or units needs to be introduced into a learner or child’s worldview. This is the idea that some of the features of the environment can be construed as self-contained objects. Take for example, collections of toys, pebbles, or sweets. Each item in the collection can be treated as a separate independent object. In addition, steps in climbing a stairway, walking along the ground step by step, or other sequences of actions can also be seen in this way as series of discrete actions. Such a way of viewing a domain, although concrete and limited in extension at first, prepares it to be viewed as countable (Ernest, 2021b). Once the experienced world is thus construed into repeated units, the foundations of counting can be laid. A further prerequisite to be learned and tacitly agreed is a list of word numerals that must be used in a repeatable order. This list must be both stable, that is invariant, and as at least as long as the number of items to be counted. This is the first of Gelman and Gallistel’s (1978) five counting principles, (1) The stable-order principle. The other principles are as follows. 2. The one-one principle – this requires the assignment of one, and only one, distinct counting word to each of the items to be counted. 3. The cardinal principle – this states that, on condition that the one-one and stable-­ order principles have been followed, the number name allocated to the final object in a collection represents the number of items in that collection. 4. The abstraction principle  – this allows that the preceding principles can be applied to any collection of objects, whether tangible or not. 5. The order-irrelevance principle – this involves the knowledge that the order in which items are counted is irrelevant. These principles are something that a child must learn in their schooling or early home life. But although often viewed as knowledge, they are deontic social agreements. A quasi-counting activity must conform to them, or it is not socially acceptable. Entering a game or any social practice requires conforming to the rules and regulations of that activity as a participant. The rules are compulsory. They are expressed in the deontic modality that indicates how behaviours must be, to accord with the relevant norms. The five counting principles listed here are part of the social agreements about what constitutes counting and ultimately regulates what numbers are. All mathematicians will adhere to such agreements, but they are so basic, so deeply entrenched, that with familiarity they seem obvious, unnecessary, and not needing to be articulated. Rules and agreements like these become subsumed into the

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perceived essence of counting actions and number objects. Starting as necessary features of counting they become seen as features of numbers, intrinsic properties of the reified mathematical objects themselves. Only when someone like Cantor introduces his theory of transfinite numbers is the one-one principle made explicit, jolted back into focus, and considered in the light of the new problematic theoretical context, the equipollence of infinite sets. Otherwise, the one-one principle in counting is seen as intrinsic and definitional, rather than a norm that is (must be) followed. One of the most valuable and remarkable features of mathematics is how the rich, deep, and complex concepts and objects come into being from simpler objects and actions. This allows the dizzy heights of abstraction to be scaled and objects to be created that exceed by so much what we perceive and experience in the material world, such as the concept of infinite sets. However, one cost of such repeated objectification and abstraction processes is that the rules and social agreements that determine the nature and limits of lower-level objects, concepts, and actions become perceived as essential characteristics of the more abstract objects created from them. The social agreements that shape and constitute arithmetic, for example, become hidden, forgotten, and indeed eventually denied as being the social agreements underpinning number. It is not that their observance is breached, but that they are seem as so essential that they become regarded as intrinsic to the constitution of the objects. Many mathematicians and philosophers state that the natural numbers are something given to humankind by nature (Penrose, 2004). The relationships, extrinsic constraints, and norms that govern their proper and permissible usages become seen as intrinsic properties of the objects in themselves. The social agreements that give shape to objects of mathematics become seen as inscribed in the essence and very being of the objects. The intellectual struggles of humankind over millennia to create counting and numeration systems are no longer seen as processes that through their notational inventions, their actions and conceptions, created what are now seen as the independent objects, the natural numbers. Even their name suggests that these numbers are natural, that is, given by nature, rather than the outcomes of processes of social construction based on imposed rules and norms. My claim is that in this way social agreements play a constitutional role in mathematical objects. Cole (2009, p.  9) proposes ‘The thesis that mathematical entities—specifically mathematical domains—are pure constitutive social constructs constituted by mathematical practices, i.e. the rationally constrained social activities of mathematicians’. In other words, mathematical objects are social constructs, built up from the socially enacted and socially warranted actions described above, and founded on the social agreements of the community of mathematicians. These agreements are expressions of the deontic nature of mathematical practices and are manifested in conforming to their rules and norms. Many, if not most, of these agreements are tacit, agreements in forms of life, as in mutually aligned mathematical practices, not as explicit verbal agreements.

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1.2.6 Signs as Constitutive of Mathematical Objects I have argued that the signs of mathematics play a constitutive role in the formation of mathematical objects. Actions on signs and objects become the next level of abstract objects, themselves depicted by signs. However, it should be made clear that not all mathematical objects are named by signs. Sometimes abstractions create whole classes of mathematical objects. For example, abstracting the set of Natural numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, … into a completed whole named ‘N’ does not result in an infinite number of names for all the members of N. We have a procedure for naming arbitrarily large natural numbers, but we can never name more than the members of a finite subset of N. Likewise mathematical abstraction creates many sets and classes of mathematical objects which can never all be named. Only a finite number of these mathematical objects can be named, even when the set to which they all belong is named. Thus abstraction, generalization and, in particular, the idealized completion of sets, sequences, and series cannot name all their members when they are infinite.6 Quine (1969) argues that the ontological commitment of any theory, mathematical or scientific, is to the domains of objects over which its variables range. Thus, Peano arithmetic, a scientific canonization of the rules of arithmetic, is ontologically committed to that which the variable n ranges over. This domain is N, the set of all Natural numbers, and so Peano’s theory is committed to the existence of all of the Natural numbers. Zermelo–Fraenkel set theory is committed to the existence of all of the sets its variable x ranges over. This class of sets is very large and contains sets of several orders of infinite magnitude. In both of these examples, our ontological commitments, the classes of mathematical objects that the theories incorporate or bring into being includes many, many objects that cannot ever be all named. In both the cases of N and V,7 the universe of sets created by Zermelo–Fraenkel (ZFC) set theory, the global mathematical object constructed is a mathematical domain, a space containing many mathematical objects. These are themselves mathematical objects that encapsulate the endless processes of generating their members, each becoming a single entity within the space of mathematics.

1.2.7 The Human Construction of Mathematical Objects I have argued that mathematical objects are formed through actions on mathematical objects and signs which are then abstracted and reified into higher level mathematical concepts and objects. Notice that the verbs involved are all active: ‘to abstract’, ‘to reify’, ‘to act’, which all represent the action of a subject on an object.  This answers the criticism of Cole (2008) that names cannot be constituent of mathematical objects because there are too many objects to be named. 7  V is the von Neumann class of hereditary well-founded sets. 6

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The subjects in question are irrefutably humans. It is their (our) activities that create mathematical objects, for mathematical objects do not create themselves. Their performativity lies in the capacity of mathematical objects to engender actions and changes through the humans that use them; they are not possessed of any intrinsic or self-subsistent agency. It is humans who perform all these actions, and it is humans that abstract from these actions to create new mathematical objects. Although mathematical objects are real, their reality is part of cultural activity and its products. Like all of culture, from money, clothing and cookery to languages, movies and ideas, mathematical objects are cultural objects. They are created in mathematical activities, which to a large extent can be represented as language games that take place within mathematical forms of life (Wittgenstein, 1953). Humans acting socially, within mathematical forms of life or mathematical practices, over time, are what create, enact, develop, and sustain mathematical processes, concepts, and objects. This is why the assumptions of presentism are problematic. They deny or disregard the passage of time which is ineliminable in the emergence and being of mathematical objects. Thus, for example, Endress (2016, p.  130) critiques John Searle’s (1995) account of social construction because ‘his entire work fails to answer or even discuss the question of how the status of “something,” as well as its “functions,” socially emerge’. This may not be Searle’s focus but his analyses do partially indicate how the physical comes to have social function and so be socially constructed. However, unless one understands their becoming, the transitions in the formation of any social constructed entity, including mathematical objects, with its shift from process to structural object, one cannot fully understand what they are. Transitions and shifts occur over time, and these affect the constitution of the emergent mathematical objects, so time and becoming cannot be dispensed with. Time is implicated in mathematics in three ways. First, there is historical time over which the mathematics in cultures comes to be and develops. I have considered in passing how counting and numeration systems have developed from oral counting, tally marks, and then written numerals of increasing complexity and sophistication. Second, there is personal time in which a person’s knowledge of mathematics and grasp of its objects develops. I will say more about this in the next section, but development over time in this domain is undeniable. Third, there is the foundational analogue of time, the logical development, over the course of which, starting with primitive notions, the theoretical framework of a mathematical theory develops. This last is not real time, but a strong analogue because of the logical before and after relations.8 Concepts, definitions, results, and proofs are built up in a logical sequence when the later elements depend logically on the former ones.9  Lakatos (1976) points out that the ‘logical time’ of justification often subverts the ‘chronological time’ of discovery, when the presentation of a completed proof inverts the order in which it was created. 9  I reject a possible fourth aspect of time. This is the consideration of mathematics as having universal validity across time and space, as this contradicts the sequential emergence of mathematics, as well as the social constructionist assumptions of this chapter. 8

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This is similar to Lakoff and Nunez’s (2000) conceptual metaphor that maps from an image schema for temporal succession into the more abstract domain of logic. They call this the logical consequence is temporal succession metaphor. Consider how Peano arithmetic begins with two primitive notions, a starting number, 0 say (historically Peano started with 1), and the successor function denoted by S such that S(n) is the successor of n (Peano used ‘+1’). It also includes a number of axioms. These make the following five assertions. Zero is a natural number. Every natural number has a successor in the natural numbers. Zero is not the successor of any natural number. If the successor of two natural numbers is the same, then the two original numbers are the same. Lastly, there is the induction axiom.10 If 0 has a certain property, and whenever n has that property, so does n + 1, then all of the natural numbers have that property. There are also the three standard identity axioms (reflexivity, symmetry, and transitivity) specifying the properties of the equality relation (=). On the basis of these small beginnings, the operations of addition, multiplication, and exponentiation can be defined as well as subtraction and division in the limited ways they apply to natural numbers. From this modest foundation, number theory can now be built up with increasingly complex concepts, functions, and theorems. Ontologically, it can be said that the initial axioms bring the natural numbers into being, within the formal theory, but as the theory progresses, new objects corresponding to the subsequently defined concepts and functions are also brought into being. A realist, either a Platonist or another kind of realist, can respond to these assertions with the answer that Peano arithmetic does not create the natural numbers but merely provides an elegant and minimal axiomatization of the properties and assumptions underpinning the already existent natural numbers. Over history and in personal development, this is true. The historical growth in the formulation of the natural numbers and number theory does precede Peano’s axiomatization. Foundationally this is not true, the simpler parts of the theory logically precede the more complex and dependent later parts. There is an irreversible flow, if not of time, of its logical analogue from the simpler to the more complex later parts of the theory. My argument is that we also need to allow for time in philosophy, and in particular, in ontology. Both the objects of mathematics and the mathematical identities of persons, that I consider in the next section, grow and change their characters over time, they are subject to processes of becoming. Ontology needs to permit emergence and change in the entities for which it accounts. A static snapshot of being will not suffice to explain of what it is formed.

10  If P is a subset of N, and 0 belongs to P, and if n belonging to P implies S(n) also belongs to P, then P=N.

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1.2.8 The Ontology of Mathematical Objects At this point in the exposition, I have now introduced all the elements that make up the social constructionist account of the ontology of mathematical objects. What constitutes mathematical objects? Mathematical objects are abstract objects in shared cultural space (the space of mathematics) constituted by rules and agreements established in and by the community of mathematicians, many of which are also sustained and upheld in wider society. These rules and agreements include the tacit rules and conventions into which mathematicians are socialized as they participate in the shared social practices of mathematics. In Wittgensteinian (1953) terms, these include agreement in forms of life in which the actions and practices of participants are aligned, that is, run in the same direction, often without this direction ever being explicitly articulated. Mathematical objects gain their legitimacy through usage, for every instance of use confirms their validity, both among mathematicians and in wider society. In addition, the patterns of, and connections within, their usage also gives them their meanings. Mathematical domains are also objects of mathematics, even if they are populated with an infinite number of mathematical objects which cannot all be named. What ‘stuff’ are mathematical objects made from? Mathematical objects are reifications built from abstracted actions on simpler mathematical objects and actions. Humans have a capacity for and a tendency towards nominalization. Just as nouns are created in the nominalization of verbs describing actions, so too mathematical objects are created from the nominalization of mathematical actions. This is a process of reification, encapsulation, and transformation in which actions become structural objects (Sfard, 1994; Dubinsky, 1991). Furthermore, this process is cumulative with increasing levels of abstraction, as actions on simpler objects become more complex objects in themselves. Where are mathematical objects to be found? Mathematical objects exist in the cultural space of mathematics, a shared domain of signs and operations, whose rule-­ governed uses provide their meanings. This domain is primarily added and used by mathematicians, but also widely accessed by the public for simple constructs like numbers, whose constitution links them to actions in the empirical world. Why are mathematical objects objective? Mathematical objects are objective because at any given time they appear ‘solid’ (inflexible and invariant) founded on mathematicians’ agreements and fixed, publicly shared uses in the domain of mathematics and beyond. Their uses are rule governed and there is widespread agreement without ambiguity as to correct usage. Once created mathematical objects ‘detach from their originator’ (Hersh, 1997, p. 16) becoming independent and self-subsistent entities within a shared domain, the cultural space of mathematics. However, if mathematical practices shift over time, so too may the rules and objects of mathematics themselves, reflecting such cultural shifts. Why are mathematical objects and their relationships viewed as necessary? The necessity arises from the deontic nature of the rules of mathematics. Mathematicians’ agreements are often tacit, being obligations assumed with participation in

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mathematical practices, and these determine what ‘must be so’. The rules are imperatives, analogous to those that must be followed in order to play chess. To engage in mathematical activity, you must use the objects of mathematics in the prescribed ways. Mathematics and mathematical entities are non-contingent because they necessarily conform to and obey the rules, customs, and conventions of mathematics. Furthermore, mathematical results and theorems necessarily follow by logic from the axioms and assumptions laid down in mathematical theories.11 Logic also rests on deontic necessity, for it follows laid down and inflexible tracks of reasoning that, it is accepted, ‘must be so’ (Ernest, In preparation). Why do mathematical rules have the modal status of necessity? Mathematical rules and customs make up the institution of mathematics. The institutionalization of social processes such as mathematical practices grows out of the habitualization and customs, gained through mutual observation with subsequent mutual tacit agreement on the ‘way of doing things’ in these practices. Thus, to engage in a mathematical practice is to be habituated into the norms, customs, and uses of the rules and to follow and apply them unquestioningly as imperatives. Associated with institutions such as mathematics are a set of beliefs that ‘everybody knows’ (e.g. ‘there is a set of natural numbers {1, 2, 3, 4, …}’, 1 + 1 = 2, 50 + 50 = 100, 9 > 8, and so on). These beliefs make the institutionalized structure plausible and acceptable, thus providing legitimation for the necessity of the institution of mathematics (Berger & Luckmann, 1966). Much of the language of mathematical texts is imperative, in the deontic modality, as engaging in the practice (‘playing the game’) necessitates following the tacit and explicit rules and norms embedded in, and constituting the institution of, mathematics (Ernest, In preparation).

1.3 Human Subjects and Mathematical Identities 1.3.1 Being in Terms of Mathematical Identity In this section, I aim to address and tentatively answer the ontological problem of mathematics education mentioned above. This problem concerns persons, for in mathematics education, the primary concern is with human beings, both learners and teachers. What is the nature of a living, thinking human being? We know it is (we are all) a biological animal but are there any special features of a human being that pertain to mathematics and its teaching and learning mathematics? Here, my concern is what I term mathematical identity. By this I mean those acquired capacities in the child and adult that enable participation in mathematical activities. This could be termed a person’s mathematical power or capability. I do

 Note that some of the axioms and assumptions that underpin mathematics can be contingent, as they may follow from mathematicians’ choices, albeit constrained choices. The same holds for mathematical logic. 11

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not mean the person’s self-image, social image, or sense of belonging to a group, be it as a mathematician, mathematics teacher, or mathematics student. These are the sociological senses of the term mathematical identity widely used in mathematics education, such as in Owens (2008). In considering the nature of individual human beings from the perspective of their capabilities, one must not overlook the social dimension: social practices, social groups, and even social constructions and structures. To think that individual persons exhaust all of social being is to fall into the reductionist traps of individualism. An active social group is more than a set of individuals. It includes a history of interactions with other individuals expressing themselves through actions and speech and reactions to involvement in such activities. The impact of the activities of the groups will be to change the individuals involved to greater or lesser extent. This is the fundamental principle of education, organizing social activities intended to help human beings to develop and become something different. In this section, I want to consider both a fully grown person, an adult, and a developing person, a child. By looking at these two aspects of humanity, time has already been admitted, because a child develops over time into an adult. I also signalled here and above, in the introduction, that in considering the nature of human being, there is the problem of the ideology of individualism.

1.3.2 The Ideology of Individualism The ideology of individualism is a perspective that puts individuals first. Not only is it a social theory favouring freedom of action for individuals over collective action, social responsibilities, or state control. It also positions the individual as ontologically prior to the social. Individualism may be related to the top-down position of the modernist metanarrative in which the ‘gaze’ of a reasoning Cartesian subject with its legitimating rational discourse is assumed to precede all knowledge and philosophy. The rational knower comes first and is a universal intelligence that is embodied to a greater or lesser extent in individual humans (Scheman, 1983). Modern individualism acknowledges that human beings are embodied, and we are more than just knowers for we also have drives. Our primary motivations are to seek our own survival and the satisfaction of our own, individual desires. Individualism validates this ethical self-centeredness. According to the individualistic view, humans are entirely separate and independently living creatures (Rand, 1961). Although it is conceded that our independence is not wholly complete, because we do depend on each other for help in survival, nevertheless individualism emphasizes that we are autonomous, self-­motivated, agentic creatures who have a great deal of freedom in choosing how we act and behave. Our capacities for understanding, knowing, thinking, and feeling belong to ourselves as individuals and to ourselves alone. Our consciousness is independent, unique, and unconnected with that of other people (Soares, 2018).

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Individualism underpins various modern theories such as Piaget’s genetic epistemology. According to Piaget, children develop individually following a number of inscribed stages in their growing understanding and capacities. There is an inbuilt logic to cognitive development, perhaps analogous with how a living organism grows, directed by its internal genetic programme. Thus, persons are all existentially separated creatures whose actions, learning, and even whose being take place in hermetically sealed personal domains. The social and physical environment may help or hinder a person’s development, just like water, nutrients, and being located in a sunny place will help a plant to grow. But the endpoint or goal of growth is internally encoded and driven. My criticism of this perspective is that it radically underestimates our ontological dependence on other fellow human beings (Lukes, 1968). First of all, we originate inside another human’s body, our mother’s, and cannot survive physically without close proximity to and regular attention from a primary caregiver including, but not limited to, feeding. Beyond physical survival our mental, emotional, and personality development requires caring attention for the first decade or two of the years of our lives (Lewis et  al., 2000). That attention includes many thousands of hours of involvement with others in social activities through which we acquire spoken language, or an equivalent, and other aspects of cultural knowledge. The mechanism by means of which we make our needs known and receive assurances is conversation, understood broadly. This includes the pre-verbal enacted forms of conversation involving touching, holding, crying, pre-verbal vocalization, facial expressions, gestures, and other embodied actions. It is through such means that we learn the use of words and language. We also develop our identities as persons and our emotional being by these means. Thus, my objection to individualism is that although as primates we are separate animals, as humans we are socially constituted beings. Our very formation and becoming human depends essentially on the social experiences that shape us. We would lack our special human characteristics of shared languages, shared cultures and shared modes of thinking and being, were we hived off from each other in the way that individualism supposes. Our identities are socially constructed, and we could not be the full human beings that we are if we were not socialized and enculturated.

1.3.3 Conversation and the Social Construction of Persons Ontologically, I want to distinguish between the biological genesis of the human animal and the cultural genesis of the human being as a person. Obviously, the animal provides the material and biological basis of being human, but my claim is that building on that basis, the human being needs to be socially constructed. At the heart of social constructionism lies the dialogical pattern of interactions and knowledge growth and warranting. The unit of analysis, the fundamental atom upon which social constructionism is built, is that of conversation. In its minimal manifestation, this occurs between two persons, who are communicating as

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participants in a jointly shared social activity, in a social context. There is a continuum of contexts in which conversations take place from face-to face preverbal and verbal interactions all the way to the mediated conversations using letters, emails, and other forms of media over extended distances and timespans.12 Conversation and dialogue are widely occurring and utilized notions across philosophy and the social sciences. For the philosopher Mead (1934), conversation is central to human being, mind and thinking. Rorty (1979) uses the concept of conversation as a basis for his epistemology. Wittgenstein’s (1953) key idea of language games situated in forms of life is evidently conversational, and I draw on this heavily. Many other philosophers and theorists could be cited, including Gadamer, Habermas, Buber, Bakhtin, Volosinov, Vygotsky, Berger, and Luckmann, and more generally, social constructionists. Central to the social constructionist ontology is the view (shared with Gergen and Harré) that the primary human reality is conversation. (Shotter, 1993, pp. 13)

Because of the evidently interpersonal nature of teaching, references to conversation and dialogue are very widespread in the mathematics education literature. However, concerning the philosophy and foundations of mathematics, the references are more limited. But there is growing attention to conversational, dialogical, and dialectical interpretations and philosophies of mathematics (Ernest, 1994, 1998; Dutilh Novaes, 2021; Larvor, 2001). The original form of conversation is evidently interpersonal dialogue, which consists of persons exchanging speech, or other constellations of signs generated or uttered during the period of contact, based on shared experiences, understandings, interests, values, respect, activities, demands, orders, etc. Thus, in Wittgensteinian terms, it is comprised of language games situated in human forms of life. ‘One may view the individual’s everyday life in terms of the working away of a conversational apparatus that ongoingly maintains, modifies and reconstructs his subjective reality’ (Berger & Luckmann, 1966 p.152). Two secondary forms of conversation are derived from this most immediate and primary form. First, there is intrapersonal conversation, that is thought as constituted and formed by conversation. According to this view, (verbal) thinking is an originally internalized conversation with an imagined other (Vygotsky, 1978; Mead, 1934). Intrapersonal conversation becomes much more than ‘words in the mind’, and the conversational roles of proponent and critic discussed below are internalized, becoming part of one’s mental functions (Ernest & Sfard, 2018). Second, there is cultural conversation, which is an extended variant, consisting of the creation and exchange of texts at a distance in embodied material form. I am thinking primarily of chains of correspondence be they made up of letters, papers, email messages, transmitted diagrams, and so forth, exchanged between persons. Such conversations can be extended over years, lifetimes even. It can be argued that  In this chapter I use dialogue and conversation interchangeably. Some authors use ‘dialogue’ to mean a democratic and ethically more valuable type of conversation. Here I am using these terms descriptively without prescriptive attribution of greater ethical value to one over the other. 12

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they extend beyond a single person’s lifetime, if new persons join in and maintain and extend the conversation. Indeed, human culture made up of the ideas, texts, and artefacts made and shared and exchanged by people over millennia has been termed the ‘great conversation’ (Hutchins, 1959; Oakshott, 1967). These three forms of conversation are all social. They are either social in their manifestation, in the case of interpersonal and cultural conversations, or social in nature and origin, as is the case with intrapersonal conversation. In the latter, thinking is a conversation one has with oneself, based on one’s experience of, and participation in, interpersonal conversations (Sfard, 2008). In all manifestations, stemming from its interpersonal origins, conversation has an underlying dialogical form of ebb and flow, comprised of the alternation of voices in one register followed by another in the same register or of assertion and counter assertion. Conversations result in affirmation and bonding, unless the responses are in the less common forms of negation, refutation, rejection, or the silencing of a speaker. Just cooperation in the form of keeping the channel open provides feelings of enhancement for the speakers. More generally, a fully extended concept of interpersonal conversation including non-verbal communication, mimesis and touch encompasses all of human interaction and is the basis for all social cohesion, identity formation, and culture. In addition, I wish to claim that all human knowledge and knowing are conversational, including mathematics. Elsewhere I have described the specific features of mathematics that support this analysis, namely that many mathematical concepts are at base conversational, as are the processes of discovery and justification of mathematical knowledge (Ernest, 1994, 1998). However, a word of caution is needed before I further develop conversational theory. Although mathematics is at its root conversational, it is also the discipline par excellence which hides its dialogical nature under its monological appearance. Research mathematics texts expunge all traces of multiple voices, and human authorship is concealed behind a rhetoric of objectivity and impersonality. This is why the claim that mathematics is conversational might seem so surprising. It is well hidden, and it subverts the traditional view of mathematics as disembodied, superhuman, monolithic, certain, and eternally true.

1.3.4 The Critical Roles of Proponent and Responder in Conversation Conversation is the basis of all feedback, whether it be in the form of acceptance, elaboration, reaction, asking for reasons, correction, and criticism. Such feedback is in fact essential for all human knowledge growth and learning. In performing such functions, the different conversational roles include the two main forms of proponent and critic, which occur in all of the modes (inter, intra, cultural), but originate in the interpersonal.

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The role of the proponent lies in initiation, reaching out, putting forward an idea or emergent sequence of ideas, a line of thinking, a narrative, a thought experiment, or a reasoned argument. The aim is to share feelings, make demands, communicate an idea, build understanding, or convince the listener (Peirce, 1931-58; Rotman, 1993). Elsewhere I have described how this is the mechanism underpinning the construction of new mathematical knowledge (Ernest, 1994, 1998). In contrast, there is the role of responder, including critic, in which an utterance or communicative act is responded to in terms of acknowledgement of its comprehensibility, acting in response to a request, actively demonstrating a shared understanding, providing an elaboration of the content, or in other ways. In the role of the critic, the action or utterance may be responded to in terms indicating weaknesses in its understandability and meaning, its weaknesses as a proposal, its syntactic flaws, how it transgresses shared rules, and so on. Critical responses need not be negative, and the role of the responder includes that of friendly listener following a line of thinking, narrative, or a thought experiment sympathetically in order to understand and appreciate it, and perhaps offer suggestions for its extension variation or improvement. In conversation, ideally the voices or inputs of the proponent and critic alternate in a dialectical see-saw or waltz pattern. In its most rational or mature discursive mode, the proponent puts forward a thesis. The critic responds with a critical antithesis. Third, the proponent, prompted by the critic, modifies the thesis and puts forward a synthesis, a correction, or replacement that is the new thesis in the next iteration of the cycle. Thus, we have a dialectical process approximating the thesis-­ antithesis-­synthesis pattern. In this cycle, the speed of the iterations can vary greatly. In a face-to-face conversation about a mathematical problem at a whiteboard, there can be many mathematical back-and-forth contributions in the space of an hour. But in submitting a mathematics paper to a teacher or journal, it may be that weeks or months pass before critical feedback is received. From the outset, or nearly so, persons will adopt both the positions of proponent and critic, sometimes within the same conversation. This can also be the case with intrapersonal conversations in which, say, someone thinking about anything, such as a mathematical problem, having internalized these roles alternates between proponent and self-critic. These two roles are widely present in teaching (teacher/expositor vs. examiner/ assessor) and learning (listener/engagement with learning tasks vs. responder/ reviser following formative assessment). Indeed, my claim is that these two roles reappear throughout all human social interactions in the form of communicator and responder, although not all elements of conversation need necessarily fall into these two categories.

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1.3.5 The Significance of Conversation in Social Activity Wittgenstein (1953) interprets human living in terms of his fundamental concepts, language games, and forms of life. Language games can be understood as conversations, and these are embedded in human forms of life, that is as social activities. Every social activity has a purpose, a goal, and language and conversation are communicative techniques for working together towards that goal. Examples include mothering an infant with the goal of the infant flourishing (holding, feeding, responding, etc.), working together in a carpentry workshop with the aim of building furniture, working mathematical problems in a classroom with the goal of learning mathematics, and so on.13 In all such activities, the goal of the activity comes first, and the ways of working, the conversational communications are all about furthering the goal. In such activities, both roles of conversation are important. Conversation can help to focus attention, bond the participants, and direct activities.14 In this context, the role of responder or critic is vital. When a colleague or more expert participant demonstrates or suggests a way of working or guides the other utterances of the sort ‘like this, not like that’ embody the role of the critic. This can take the form of Show, Copy, Guide (correction). The teacher shows an action, the learner copies the action, and the teacher guides and corrects the action. By teacher, I mean anybody in the role of guiding partner and correcting responder, whether they be a parent, peer, schoolteacher, workmate, or trainer; in short, the more knowledgeable the other within the learner’s Zone of Proximal Development (Vygotsky, 1978). Given that meaning is largely given by use, following Wittgenstein (1953), through guiding and correcting use, the more knowledgeable other is shaping the associated meanings for the learner. I want to stress that this process, this mode of interaction, is vital in learning how to conduct any practice. This is not only true in concrete production practices, such as carpentry, baking, building brick walls, and so on. It is the mechanism by mean of which all social rules are communicated. These rules include the correct use of spoken language, modes of acceptable behaviour in public, how to treat people, animals and things (ethics in practice), mathematical activities, and so on. This conversational mechanism is how the rules and agreements that make up social institutions are communicated and maintained. Some rules and agreements may have explicit linguistic formulations, like laws of the land, or mathematical axioms, but by far the majority of socially accepted rules and agreements are implicit and are learned through copying others’ performances and the novice’s own corrected usage.

 This is not to deny that persons working together in a shared practice can have different goals, such as reluctant student not fully participating in the classroom practice that the teacher is directing. 14  Conversation can also be used to further separate the interlocutors by asserting and reinforcing power and status differences, such as a teacher imposing order on an unruly class. 13

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1.3.6 The Realities We Inhabit I want to start with the assumption that all humans share some indescribable underlying realities. My claims about this shared reality are ontological not epistemological, we can never fully know these realities, but we learn how to operate in them. In some unchallengeable pre-scientific and pre-philosophical sense, human beings all have the experience of living together on the Earth. As a common species, we have comparable bodily functions and experiences that make our sense of being who we are and of daily life commensurable. In virtually all cases, these shared realities are in fact the social activities in which we participate. Heidegger’s (1962) view is that we all have a given, ‘thrown’ preconceptualized experience of being an embodied person living in some sort of society. He celebrates authenticity, our ‘being-here-now’ existence (Dasein), an attitude that acknowledges our multiple existence in the linked but disparate worlds of our experience: the bodily, mundane, discursive, political, professional, institutional, and cultural realms. Our experience in these social and worldly forms-of-life is taken for granted. It provides the grounds on which all knowing and philosophy begins, although no essential knowledge or interpretation of the basal lived reality is either assumed or possible. This is a bottom-up perspective that contrasts with the top-down position of modernist metanarratives in which a legitimating rational discourse and the ‘gaze’ of a reasoning Cartesian subject is assumed to precede all knowledge and philosophy. The rational knower does not come first, he (and I use the masculine deliberately) is not a universal disembodied intelligence, but a construction with historically shaped sensibilities. Once again, this illustrates the need to accommodate growth, development, emergence, and becoming in ontology. Virtually all of our capacities are shaped by the social practices in which we participate. We could not learn, understand, use, or make mathematics unless we were educated, language and sign using social beings with personal histories and mathematical learning trajectories. Like every (academic or school) subject, mathematical knowledge requires an already present knower, and this must be a fleshy, embodied human being with both developmental history (including an educational history) and a social presence and location. Obvious as these statements are, they have been ruled irrelevant and inadmissible by generations of philosophers and mathematicians that subscribe to an absolutist or Platonist philosophies of mathematics. Paramount amongst the realities we inhabit are the social institutions of which we are a part. Our understandings, as evidenced by the ways in which we participate, are shaped by long histories of conversational exchanges, situated in various social practices. These formative conversations have not only inducted us as participating entrants to, and members of, the institutional practices and domains. They have also shaped our actions so as to be maintainers and onwards developers of the social institutions. Social institutions and social realities are kept alive and afloat (metaphors for continuing and enduring existence) by the myriad actions of the participants in reaffirming the conventions and rules intrinsic to the institutions.

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These reaffirming actions are directed through conversations with both insiders, that is participant members, and outsiders, demarcating the rules, norms, conventions, and boundaries that define and constitute the institutions and entry to the associated social practices.

1.3.7 Conversation and the Genesis of Thinking An important part of conversation theory concerns how it is implicated in the genesis of thinking and constitutive of thought. To sketch the genesis of thinking, we start with a human baby with its sense impressions of its world of experience, probably beginning in a rudimentary way during its period of gestation. Some of these sense data originate from outside its own body, such as from light (impacting via seeing), from sound (via hearing), from touch (via skin pressure nerve arousal). Some of these experiences originate from within the baby’s own body, such as hunger, bodily discomfort, and what we might see as spontaneous emotions. These two sources of experience are deeply interwoven. The distinction is far from absolute since sensory inputs must be interpreted in both cases. I believe that the baby notices invariants and starts to impose some order, structure, or pattern on its experiences giving rise to what Vygotsky (1978) calls spontaneous concepts. What such concepts are I cannot say precisely but they may not only include regularities in sensations but also regularities in responses such as movements, vocalizations, etc. Undoubtedly, these concepts vary and grow over time; they are not static and need not be constant. The baby is not isolated in this world of experiences, actions, and concepts because the baby is involved in preverbal dialogues, comprising reciprocal actions and what we might call signalling with others, most notably the mother or primary caregiver. At this stage, it is hard to know what the baby’s thinking is like. Presumably there will be ‘inner’ sensations and experiences such as pleasure and discomfort or displeasure, recognition of familiar persons, objects and experiences, desires, associated emotions and feelings, sensory images recalled from memory. There may well be reactions to familiar and non-familiar persons, objects, and experiences, accompanied by emotions such as interest, curiosity, desire. The baby will also experience negative emotions including anger, anxiety, or fear, in response to such experiences as being startled by sudden loud noises. What the flow of ideas and experiences brought into consciousness is like I cannot say, but I expect it will be led by sensory stimuli, whether external or internal in origin. Now we move to the next stage, although of course this overlaps with the preverbal phase, and ultimately engulfs it, as I shall argue. Other persons, such as the mother, will start to use words with the baby, beginning a verbal dialogue, accompanying embodied exchanges such as looking, touching, holding, rocking, and so on. There are intermediary phases in the development of language such as the baby babbling in what we can interpret as pretend speech in the ‘game of talking’. After some exposure to adult speech, the baby will start to use words back, mummy,

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daddy, ball, dog, or whatever. The baby starts to use these words in a regular and recognizable way. At this stage, the baby/young child is starting to develop what Vygotsky (1962) terms scientific concepts, which would be better termed social or cultural concepts. The use and mastery of language takes quite a long time and during this time the child develops and uses a growing set of linguistic capabilities. Of course, this development is triggered by engagement in a growing range of activities with accompanying dialogues in different contexts, with different purposes, and with different but overlapping vocabularies. Somewhat later during childhood, after the acquisition of spoken language, most children also start to learn to read and write, and these encounters with written language may also feed into the development of their thinking. This includes written arithmetic and other parts of mathematics. However, I won’t speculate on the impact of reading and writing on thinking beyond its role as an add-on and expansion of spoken language. A second strand of development concerns attention, which is part of human agency. A baby turns to look at objects or people that interest it or that move and draw their attention. Part of this is following their mother’s or caregiver’s gaze (Deák, 2015). Of course, other sensory stimuli also capture its attention, sounds, touch, smells, tastes, pain, and so on. As the child develops, its power of self-­ directed attention grows and becomes increasingly volitional. In addition to choosing what to attend to in its experiential (perceptual) world, the child can choose and initiate its own activities. It can direct its attention to different activities including toys, games, video, TV programmes, touch screens, nature, animals, and other things. One of the most important things that a child attends to is other humans and dialogue. The child attends to many utterances from others and participates in dialogues. So now the stage is set for me to propose what thinking is or at least might be. According to Vygotsky (1962), the child’s spontaneous and scientific (that is, linguistically acquired) concepts meld or at least start to interact and form one inner system of concepts from quite early on. Words and linguistic utterances have been experienced in various contexts and the uses they are put to and the activities they are a part constitute their initial meanings. Young children will have spoken dialogues with themselves in which they may instruct themselves mimicking what they have experienced with more capable, older speakers. After a while, these self-­ directed conversations become silent, internalized but perhaps visible through sub-­ vocal lip movements. On this basis, children’s private thinking consists of an inner dialogue the person has with themselves. This is learned from participation in conversations and discourse with others. But this inner dialogue is not just made up of words – it is supplemented by and may even have elements replaced by visual imagery, memory episodes, feelings (emotions, etc.) within the experienced stream of ideas. An associational logic is at play so perceived external persons, objects, or events may trigger associations that become contents in the inner dialogue. Thus thinking, the inner dialogue, may be a string or cluster of meanings, concepts, or reasonings. This may be prompted by external stimuli, such as conversations/speech from someone

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else, experiences or events in the world, or may be internally generated, such as when I solve a mathematical problem mentally. The stream of ideas, etc., that I experience in thought is multimodal and can involve words and associated concepts, imagery both real and imagined, smell and touch impressions, or memories of them, etc. We also have some control over this internal dialogue, we can choose to remember something, direct our attention to some idea, memory, problem, etc. Of course, things also come unbidden to our thought, either because of some deep unconscious trigger or an association that draws our attention aside or onwards. Although our thought originates in interpersonal conversation, in becoming intrapersonal conversation, it differs from public speech. For as conversation is internalized, it combines with our preverbal thought, sensory perceptions, visual images, emotions to become a richer multimodal conversation we have with ourselves. All these aspects as well as personal meanings are attached to the words and signs we use. Thus, we can think spatially as well as verbally. Vygotsky (1962) argues that the contents of our mind are not structured the way our speech is. When we engage in social, interpersonal conversations we also communicate multimodally using gestures, expressions, tone of voice, objects, and other props, as well as our oral linguistic utterances. Our thinking, this internal stream of ideas and thoughts, is a dialogue in three ways. First, learning to speak is by means of participation in dialogue and conversation. So languaging is a process driven by public speech, that is words and speech. These evoke meaningful concepts and reasoning responses in us  – their content and form are irrevocably tied in with their origin, that is spoken dialogue or conversation. Vygotsky is often interpreted as saying that speech and dialogue become internalized. This is of course a metaphorical rather than a literal description. Children learn to imitate phrases. I expect they can also imagine the sounds of these utterances subvocally, that is solely in the mind. So, exposure to speech leads to something like speech in the mind. Second, our streams of thought come in segments. How these are demarcated or segmented varies, but each segment will have a coherent meaning. Each of these thought segments evokes an association or follow on, a response or reply. Thus, we follow each thought by its echo or answer, like question and answer, thus exhibiting the dialogue form. Just as in a spoken dialogue, we have choices as to how to choose/ make our replies thus steering the conversation. Likewise in our internal dialogue, we can choose how to follow on a line of thought. Of course, some people with compulsions find it difficult to steer away from a recurrent pattern of thought. Indeed, this can happen to any of us if we are stressed by a difficult situation or conflicting or difficult demands or an unsatisfactory ending to a previous conversation. So, all my general claims must be hedged with caveats because less typical events and cases can always occur. Third, our thinking is dialogical when we are reacting to an artefact – a piece of writing, painting, a performance, or even someone talking including a lecture. The attended-to part of the artefact is one voice in the conversation and our reactive or reflective thoughts constitute the second voice, which we may or may not utter in public.

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Our internal dialogue can have a variety of functions. It might involve planning some action, a solution to a problem, a plan for making something, the development of ideas. This is imagination at work in thought. This may involve all sorts of meanings including concepts, word meanings (associations), visual imagery, practical sequences of actions. However, such planning or creative imagination need not anticipate or take place separately from our activities. For often we can be involved in making something, such as me writing these observations, and not know beyond a hazy idea, if one has that, where our stream of ideas or words – our internal dialogue – is going to lead. Often our next step in the creative process is enacted as the moment arises. It is a choice, often what feels like the right choice, possibly the necessary choice, but made in the moment.

1.3.8 Extending the Meaning as Use Theory Following Wittgenstein (1953), I have adopted his operationalization that the meaning of a word is in many cases given by its use. However, this needs disambiguation, for ‘use’ has multiple meanings. The particular use which I make when I utter the word ‘red’ or ‘addition’, say, at a specific event within a particular form of life is one such enactment of meaning. But the system of use or usage has another meaning. This includes a systematic grammatical theory of usage that describes past correct usages and potentially includes future correct uses or at least the rules that will guide them. De Saussure made this point when distinguishing Parole (utterances of spoken language) from Langue (the system of language). Specific uses are one thing but systematic patterns of use which entail imperatives about future specific uses are another. What one can say is that the spoken utterance meaning of use comes first. Use in the systematic, theoretical sense is secondary to specific instances of participation in conversations and making or hearing utterances. (Parole precedes Langue.) There is a history (we all have histories) of language uses, and we all have a set of memories of instances of language uses – our own and others. In addition, these memories will include the corrections we have received, observed, or given, via conversations, which have shaped our capacities for spoken language. In fact, we may not remember many such corrections, but our linguistic know-how will have been shaped by such instances of correction and correct usage, from childhood on. Many persons will not have explicit or full theories of word use, but have the capacity to make and understand meanings from word utterances based on their implicit know-how. In the present context, the significance is that the meaning of a word as given by a specific utterance or instance of use is only partial. In the broader sense, meaning as use depends on a whole pattern of usage to give a better indication of meaning. This pattern might only be encapsulated in a tacit set of guidelines or intuitions whose function is, in effect, to regulate which uses are correct and which are not. At this point, Robert Brandom’s (2000) inferentialist account of meaning is helpful. For Brandom, the meaning of words and sentences is largely given by their use

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in language, but it is a central aspect of use, namely the nexus of inferential connections with other words and sentences. For Brandom, the inferentialist meaning of a word or sentence S is its connections through reasoning with antecedents (reasonings leading to) S and its consequences (reasonings that follow from S). These uses are shown through enacted utterances, but meaning reflects past uttered links and is always open towards the future. So, the current meaning of a word or sentence, at any time, is partial and never final, for further patterns of use will supplement the meaning. As Wittgenstein (1978) says, a new proof of a proposition, changes the meaning of the proposition. Adding logical antecedents or consequents to a sentence changes its meaning.

1.3.9 Dialogic Space I have considered how children acquire language and the ability to communicate meanings. In addition, I have described how children internalize conversation as a basis for their thinking. On this basis, I can now offer an account of the zone in which meanings are communicated and shared, termed dialogic space (Wegerif, 2013; Lambirth, 2015). This is the virtual space in which words, gestures, and signs are uttered, perceived, and responded to. Dialogic space or spaces are both public and private. A conversation between persons has 'visible' multimodal utterances which are public, but also runs through our private spaces of understanding where we attend to the dialogue and create or conjure up associations, narratives, imagery, emotional responses in our reception of the dialogue. We may engage in an intrapersonal dialogue in response. Figure 1.1 represents some of the basic elements of dialogic space and its participants. I emphasized the key actions with of italics. As participants, through listening we pay attention to what is being said, understanding it in terms of building the meaning links to what we know (the network of words and concepts to which we have personal access). Through understanding we take personal ownership of the meaning links to antecedent and consequent expressions in our network of reasoning relations. When we have an expressive impulse, we loosely assemble the idea or remark and express it as our chosen supplement to the dialogue that we utter. (Note that our remark is not usually created in private and then uttered. It normally comes into being as it is uttered.) Every participant in the dialogue does this. Participants also own a set of rules about how the dialogue should be conducted in terms of participative membership, the appropriate form of contributions, and the conceptual content of contributions. This overall process is illustrated in Fig. 1.1. Thus, in addition to exploring and developing the ideas under discussion (the content of the dialogue) participants’ contributions can also be utterances that are about regulating or policing the dialogue based on rules that should reflect shared values and democratic principles. For example, in a dialogue between friends and colleagues, one or more contributors may intervene about imbalances in contributions, such as some participant speaking too much or another being

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Person 1

Person 3 Personal corner 3

DIALOGICAL SPACE * Utterances * Shared Rules

Utters

Personal corner 1

Listens

Chosen supplement Attention Ideas Meaning, New links Expressive impulse ← Ownership

Person 2 Fig. 1.1  Dialogic space with its personal corners

encouraged to contribute and be attended to. There can also be rules-based utterances on the content of the dialogue, which may be commenting on, redirecting, or curtailing some contribution to steer the direction or thrust of the dialogue in terms of the content and concepts discussed. But the most important part is the pattern of utterances that extend and develop the subject matter, the joint understanding of a topic, the solution of a shared problem, or a creative ensemble made by the group. Not mentioned but underpinning the dialogue is participation in a shared activity (a form of life) which may be purely conversational or may be making or doing something, accompanying the conversation.

1.3.10 Roles and Power Differentials in Conversation In any dialogue, persons as active agents in that dialogue take on a variety of roles. Two of the most important are speaker and listener. Speaking can involve offering new links that are responses to the previous utterances. Such responses can build on, extend what was previously said. Or they can interrogate and question what was said. Listening can be actively following the narrative and making sense of it through linking utterances with our own concepts and meaning associations. We can follow the flow of a narrative adding our own associations and responses, which we may (or may not) utter audibly or publicly. We can listen critically whereby we

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interrogate, question, or challenge the narrative as we are hearing it. We can make these reactions public or keep the thoughts to ourselves. And we should never forget that we are embodied, not just passive in listening or active in speaking – we are all the while engaged in bodily activities beyond the actions of communicating (vocalizing, facial expressions, arm, and bodily movements) for we can also be drinking coffee, walking along a road, or even building a model or material artefact together in some shared activity in our joint form of life. In addition, there are power differentials between contributors in most dialogues, based on personal force or institutional authorization. Table 1.1 lists some sample types of conversation with the relative power of the participants indicated. Table 1.1 exemplifies the more powerful within institutionalized groups as those, not only with knowledge of the rules (for progressing towards the group goal) but, most importantly, being institutionally authorized to impose the rules in regulating the activity. In informal groups, power is softer and may shift among participants to those with better knowledge of the rules, but without institutional authorization, they may be challenged and have to try to demonstrate the validity of the rules they are suggesting.

Table 1.1  Types of conversation and the relative power of participants More powerful participants (MPP) Parents – more knowledgeable and laying down behavioural rules Working in learner’s zone More knowledgeable parent, of proximal development teacher, or peer demonstrating rules, etc. Friends in discussion Power may move around group Collaborative work on Asserter of mathematical rules or school mathematics moves is MPP at the time problem Collaborative research Power moves around group project Type of conversation Family – Parenting

Less powerful participants (LPP) Children

Learner

Power may move around group Proposer of next step needing to be regulated (LPP at the time)

Working researchers less powerful if there is principal researcher Informal conversation Power moves around group unless Power moves around group between colleagues power hierarchy has been unless power hierarchy has been established established School maths class Teacher directs teaching and the Student follows teacher learning activities instructions and rules for participation School maths examination Examiners Students (examinees) University seminar Visiting lecturer Audience – but audience can take some power in the questions slot Journal editorial board Editor, referees Author

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1.3.11 Mathematical Enculturation Mathematical enculturation takes place over the course of development from childhood to adulthood. Prior to elementary schooling commencing at 5 to 7 years of age, the child will typically gain a growing mastery of spoken language and very likely engage in simple number and shape games. Typically, these will include learning and using the names of simple geometric shapes (square, circle, triangle, ball, etc.) and spoken number names (one, two, three, four, five, etc.) as well as the correct order of these first few names. There will also very likely be some learning of the single digit numerals (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, etc.). Such activities will continue in kindergarten and early elementary school plus the introduction of elementary operations, most notably addition and the addition sign ‘+’. Mathematical activity for learners typically shifts from being wholly spoken, to spoken and textual, with a shift towards the dominance of text for children’s activities. Children very likely will engage in enactive activities (counting objects such as buttons), activities presented in iconic forms (working simple tasks mostly shown with repeated pictures, such as simple flower pictures), moving on to symbolic work with texts using words and mathematical symbols. Perhaps the most central activity in the mathematics classroom is the imposition of mathematics learning tasks on students (Ernest, 2018a). These will be orally or textually presented and may be enacted in a variety of media. But over the years of schooling, throughout elementary and secondary (high school), these will become almost exclusively presented via written texts. A mathematical learning task: 1. Is an activity that is externally imposed or directed by a person or persons in power representing and on behalf of a social institution (e.g. teacher). 2. Is subject to the judgement of the persons in power as to when and whether it is successfully completed. 3. Is a purposeful and directional activity that requires human actions and work in the striving to achieve its goal. 4. Requires learner acceptance of the imposed goal, explicitly or tacitly, in order for the learner to consciously work towards achieving it15. 5. Requires and consists of working with texts: both reading and writing texts in attempting to achieve the task goal. 6. A mathematical task begins with a mathematical representation (text) and requires the application of mathematical rules to transform the representation, in a series of steps, to a required end form (e.g. in a calculation, the numerical answer). Power is at work in a mathematical task at two levels. First, at the social level, the teacher imposes the task and requires that it be attempted by the learner. Second, within the task itself, power is at work through the permitted rules and transformations  Gerofsky (1996) adds that tasks, especially ‘word problems’, also bring with them a set of assumptions about what to attend to and what to ignore among the available meanings. 15

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of the text. In other words, the apprentice mathematician must act as a conduit through which the imperatives of mathematics work. They must follow certain prescribed actions in the correct sequence. As the tasks become more complex, the apprentice mathematician will have some choices as to which rules to apply in constructing the sequence of actions or operations towards the solution, but otherwise all is imperative driven. Mathematics is a rule-driven game, and the rules are a major part of the institution of mathematics. Later in the process of mathematical enculturation, the institutional rule-based nature of mathematics is internalized, and apprentice mathematicians adopt a more general concept of mathematical task that includes self-imposed tasks that are not externally imposed and not driven by direct power relationships.16 However, in research mathematicians’ work, although tasks may not be individually subject to power relations, particular self-selected and self-imposed tasks may be undertaken within a culture of performativity that requires measurable outputs. So, power relations are at play at a level above that of individual tasks. Even where there is no external pressure to perform, the accomplishment of a self-imposed task requires the internationalization and tacit understanding of the concept of task. Such an understanding includes the roles of assessor and critic, based on the experience of social power relations. This faculty provides the basis for an individual’s own judgement as to when a task is successfully completed. Within institutional rule-­ based mathematics imperatives are at work, the dominant actions (rules) inscribed within the texts themselves. The role of the critic is to judge that the institutional rules of mathematics are applied appropriately and followed faithfully. Mathematical learning tasks are important because they introduce the learner to the rules of mathematics and its textual imperatives. For this reason, such tasks make up the bulk of school activity in the teaching and learning of mathematics. During most of their mathematics learning careers, which in Britain continues from 5 to 16  years and beyond, students mostly work on textually presented tasks. I estimate that an average British child works on 10,000 to 200,000 tasks during the course of their statutory mathematics education. This estimate is based on the not unrealistic assumptions that children each attempt 5 to 50 tasks per day, and that they have a mathematics class every day of their school career (estimated as 200 days per annum).17 A typical school mathematics task concerns the rule-based transformation of text. Such tasks consist of a textual starting point, the task statement. These texts can be presented multimodally, with the inscribed starting point expressed in written language or symbolic form, possibly with illustrative iconic representations or  There are also more open mathematical tasks such as problem solving (choose your own methods) and investigational work (pose your own questions) in school but these are not frequently encountered. 17  Much of the mathematics education literature concerns optimal teaching approaches intended to enhance cognitive, affective, critical reasoning or social justice gains (prescriptive). Here my concern is just with teaching as a process that enables students to learn mathematics, without problematizing the teaching itself, that is, purely descriptive. 16

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figures. In the classroom, these are typically accompanied by a metatext, spoken instructions from the teacher. Learners carry out such set tasks by writing a sequence of texts, including figures, literal and symbolic inscriptions, ultimately arriving, when successful, at a terminal text which is the required ‘answer’. Sometimes this sequence of actions involves the serial inscription of distinct texts. For example, in the case of the addition of two fraction numerals with distinct denominators or the solution of an equation in linear algebra. Sometimes this involves the elaboration or superinscription of a single piece of text, such as the carrying out of 3-digit column addition or the construction of a geometric figure. It can also combine both types of inscriptions. In each of these cases, there is a common structure. The learner is set a task, central to which is an initial text, the specification or starting point of the task. The learner is then required to apply a series of transformations to this text and its derived products, thus generating a finite sequence of texts terminating, when successful, in a final text, the ‘answer’. This answer text represents the goal state of the task, which the transformation of signs is intended to attain.18 In some solution sequences, new texts will be freshly introduced, such as axioms, lemmas, or methods, and therefore are not strictly transformations of the preceding text but play an integral part in the overall sequence. Formally, a successfully completed mathematical task is a sequential transformation of, say, n texts or signs (‘Si’) written or otherwise inscribed by the learner, with each text implicitly derived by n-1 rule based transformations (‘⇨i’).19 This can be shown as the sequence:

S11 S 22 S33 n 1 S n

S1 is a representation of the task as initially inscribed or recorded by the learner. This may be the text presented in the original task specification. However, the initial given text presenting the task may have been curtailed, or may be represented in some other mode than that given, such as a figure, when first inscribed by the learner. Sn is a representation of the final text, intended to satisfy the goal requirements as interpreted by the learner. The rhetorical requirements and other rules at play within the social context and following mathematical imperatives (the mathematical rules) determine which sign representations Sk and which steps, ⇨k for k  reduced learning —> mathematical failure) that he describes. Since philosophical inquiry is premised on students’ own questions and on their active engagement in the rethinking and the reconceptualizing of received views, philosophical dialogue typically involves a process of taking apart and putting together, weighing differences, reformulating, and reconceptualizing. Such a collaborative engagement in developing students’ personal views promises to produce deeper engagement with the discipline and world view of mathematics and thus to influence future mathematical experiences. Finally, philosophical inquiry promises to play a key role in the reconstruction of beliefs about oneself as a mathematics learner. The discipline has become a forbidding gatekeeper for many economic, educational, and political opportunities for students, many of whom have developed self-narratives that act to prevent them from identifying themselves as capable math learners. As such, disrupting such self-­ narratives and working proactively to reconstruct negative mathematical identities represent an important educational task. Collaborative philosophical inquiry acts to challenge these narratives and to facilitate reflection and ongoing reconstruction, and thus represents a potent mechanism for nurturing students’ mathematical identities. In short, philosophical inquiry could potentially play a role in developing an expanded and more critical view of mathematics—one that offers more meaningful connections and interactions with students’ personal experiences and which opens a view of the ethical and political implications of the use of mathematics for society which is essential to a healthy democracy. As such, dialogical philosophical inquiry represents a potentially transformative classroom practice in engaging, challenging, and reconstructing students’ views of mathematics, as well as their beliefs, attitudes, identities, and level of engagement with the discipline.

15.6 Conclusion In his masterwork Democracy and Education, Dewey (1916) highlighted the role of education in fostering a democratic society, which depends on the development of individuals as responsible citizens able to make informed and intelligent decisions leading to the public good. Although he recognized the importance of education in

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the development of citizens who are able to think for themselves, his educational model is based on scientific as opposed to philosophical inquiry and thought. However, contemporary critical mathematics education researchers point out that mathematical literacy, if solely understood as acquiring mathematical and technological (i.e., “scientific”) knowledge, is limited in promoting democratic competencies (e.g., Skovsmose, 1994, 2007; D’Ambrosio, 1999; Ernest, 2018). In respect to mathematics education, such literacy should include an analytical dimension that facilitates a critique of mathematics in its philosophical and social implications. In this chapter, I have examined Skovsmose’s notion of reflective knowing as associated with critique. I have suggested that philosophical inquiry offers a vehicle for conducting such a critique and briefly outlined a methodology for communal and collective deliberations in a classroom setting designed to facilitate such an inquiry. Finally, I have offered a framework for philosophical inquiry in the mathematics classroom, extending Skovsmose’s (2001) notion of “landscapes of mathematical investigation” to include the practice of engaging students in philosophical inquiry into common, central, and contestable questions related to the field of mathematics, both in its internal relations and its relation to the world. In short, conducting philosophical inquiry as a complement to existing mathematical practice in the classroom promises to provide another, crucial dimension to mathematics education, in that it represents a vehicle for questioning and critique and offers a discursive and pedagogical space dedicated to developing an enriched and expanded view of mathematics, as well as a deeper understanding of its connections to other school disciplines, to society, and to self.

References Andersson, A., & Barwell, R. (2021). Applying critical mathematics education. Brill. Bateson, G. (2002). Mind and nature: A necessary unity. Hampton Press. D’Ambrosio, U. (1999). Literacy, matheracy, and technocracy: A trivium for today. Mathematical Thinking and Learning, 1(2), 131–153. Davis, P., & Hersh, R. (1986). Descartes’ dream: The world according to mathematics. Dover Publications. Dewey, J. (1916). Democracy and education. The Free Press. Dewey, J. (1934). Art as experience. Perigee Books. Dewey, J. (1997). How we think. Dover Publications. (Original work published 1910). Ernest, P. (2018). The ethics of mathematics: Is mathematics harmful? In P.  Ernest (Ed.), Philosophy of mathematics education otday (pp. 187–213). Springer. Ernest, P. (2019). Privilege, power and performativity: The ethics of mathematics in society and education. Philosophy of Mathematics. Education Journal, 35. Fisher, R. (2007). Technology, mathematics, and consciousness of society. In U.  Gellert & E. Jablonka (Eds.), Mathematisation and demathematisation: Social, philosophical and educational ramifications. Sense Publishers. Freire, P. (2005). Education for critical consciousness. Continuum International Publishing. Gellert, U., & Jablonka, E. (2007). Mathematisation and demathematisation: Social, philosophical and educational ramifications. Sense Publishers.

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Giddens, A. (1994). Living in a post-traditional society. In U. Beck, A. Giddens, & S. Lash (Eds.), Reflexive modernization: Politics, tradition and aesthetics in modern social order. Stanford University Press. Keithel, C., Kotzmann, E., & Skovsmose, O. (1993). Beyond the tunnel vision: Analyzing the relationship between mathematics, society, and technology. In C. Keithel & K. Ruthven (Eds.), Learning from computers: Mathematics education and technology (pp. 243–279). Springer. Kennedy, N.  S. (2012). What are you assuming? Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 18(2), 86–91. Kennedy, D. (2013). Developing philosophical facilitation: A toolbox of philosophical moves. In S. Goering, N. Shudak, & T. Wartenberg (Eds.), Philosophy in schools: An Introduction for philosophers and teachers (pp. 110–118). Routledge. Kennedy, N.  S. (2018). Towards a wider perspective: Opening a philosophical space in the mathematics curriculum. In P.  Ernest (Ed.), Philosophy of mathematics education Today (pp. 309–321). Springer. Kennedy, N.  S. (2020). Philosophical inquiry for critical mathematics education. Mathematics Teaching Research Journal, Special Issue on Philosophy of Mathematics Education, 12(2), 225–234. Kennedy, N.  S. (2022). Landscapes of philosophical inquiry in the mathematical classroom. In N. S. Kennedy & E. Marsal (Eds.), Dialogical Inquiry in the mathematics teaching and learning: A philosophical approach. Lit Publishers. Kuhn, D., Cheney, R., & Weinstock, M. (2000). The development of epistemological understanding. Cognitive Development, 15, 309–328. Lipman, M. (1981). Pixie. The Institute for Advancement of Philosophy For Children. Lipman, M. (1993). Promoting better classroom thinking. Educational Psychology, 13(3-4), 291–304. https://doi.org/10.1080/0144341930130307 Lipman, M. (2003). Thinking in education. Cambridge University Press. Lipman, M., Sharp, A.  M., & Oscanyon, F.  S. (1980). Philosophy in the Classroom (2nd ed.). Temple University Press. Noble, S. (2018). Algorithms of oppression: How search engines reinfors rasism. NYU Press. O’Neil, C. (2016). Weapons of math distraction: How Big Data increases inequality and threatens democracy. Crown. Pierce, C. S. (1958). In C. Hartshorne & P. Weiss (Eds.), The collected papers (Vol. 1-6). Harvard University Press. Prediger, S. (2005). Developing reflectiveness in mathematics classrooms. ZDM, 37(3), 250–257. Skosmose, O. (2001). Landscapes of investigation. Zentralblatt für Didaktik der Mathematik, 33(4), 123–132. Skovsmose, O. (1994). Towards a philosophy of critical mathematics education. Kluwer. Skovsmose, O. (2007). Mathematical literacy and globalization. In B. Atweh, A. Barton, M. Borba, N. Gough, C. Keitel, C. Vistro-Yu, & R. Vithal (Eds.), Internationalization and globalization in science and mathematics education (pp. 3–18). Springer. Skovsmose, O. (2019). Crisis, critique and mathematics. Philosophy of Mathematics. Education Journal, 35. Skovsmose, O. (2020). Mathematics and ethics. Philosophy of Mathematics Education Journal, 36. Splitter, L., & Sharp, A. (1995). Teaching for better thinking: The classroom community of inquiry. Australian Council for Educational Research. Toulmin, S. (1961). Foresight and understanding. Harper and Row Publishers. Walton, D. (1998). The new dialectic: Conversational contexts of argument. University of Toronto Press. Wiggins, G., & McTighe, J. (2005). Understanding by design (Expanded 2nd ed.). Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Chapter 16

Mathematical Modelling: A Philosophy of Science Perspective Uwe Schürmann

16.1 Introduction The (analytical) separation between mathematics and reality can be found in numerous publications on mathematical modelling. For instance, PISA, the Programme for International Student Assessment (OECD, 2009), uses the following diagram in its mathematical framework (Fig. 16.1), where mathematics and the real world are considered to be separate domains. Also, the introduction of the 14th study of the International Commission on Mathematical Instruction (ICMI) on modelling and applications (Blum et al., 2007) shows a modelling cycle distinguishing between mathematics and an extra-­ mathematical world. Additionally, this separation is also postulated in various contributions to the volumes of the International Community of Teachers of Mathematical Modelling and Application (ICTMA). Figure 16.2 presents a modelling cycle by Blum and Leiß, which is frequently cited in German-language literature on mathematical modelling and is used (sometimes modified or extended) in various works (cf. Greefrath, 2011; Ludwig & Reit, 2013). Borromeo Ferri (2006) offers a carefully elaborated overview of many of these modelling cycles. It is clear from this overview that the (analytical) separation between mathematics and reality is omnipresent in the reconstruction of modelling processes. In contrast, only a few publications are questioning this separation. For instance, Biehler et al. (2015) analyse modelling processes in engineering classes and conclude from their analysis that it is rather inadequate to separate mathematics and the “rest of the world” as well as to divide modelling processes into certain distinct phases. From U. Schürmann (*) Primary School Institute, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, Muttenz, Switzerland e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_16

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Fig. 16.1  Modelling cycle in PISA’s theoretical framework (OECD, 2009, p. 105)

3 mathematical model

real model 2 real situation

1

situation model

4

6 real results

rest of the world

1 2 3 4 5 6

Understanding Simplifying/Structuring Mathematising Working mathematically Interpreting Validating

mathematical results 5

mathematics

Fig. 16.2  Modelling cycle by Blum and Leiß (2006)

their point of view, mathematical aspects must be considered during the step of simplification (part of the “rest of the world” in most of the modelling cycles), already. This theoretical insight is supported by a subsequent empirical investigation by the authors. Furthermore, Voigt (2011, p. 868) identifies the analytical separation between mathematics and reality as a problem that can only be solved if we take a close look at the area between the “rest of the world” and “mathematics”. Consequently, he considers this “intermediate realm” as substantial. Voigt strongly advocates examining not the separation but the connection between these two spheres. This builds the starting point: In the following, the relationship between mathematics and reality will be explored in more detail. In this way, the question is posed whether and to what extent the analytical separation of mathematics and reality can be justified or whether it should be supplemented or even replaced by an alternative interpretation of the relationship between mathematics and reality.

16.1.1 Orientation The separation between mathematics and reality, as found in many modelling cycles, can be interpreted in at least three different ways.

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1. As an ontological separation according to which mathematics by its very nature would have to be distinguished from reality, the real world, or the rest of the world 2. As an analytical separation primarily serving to describe modelling activities adequately, i.e. to be able to empirically research them 3. As a separation that makes sense from a constructive point of view and serves to support learners while working on modelling tasks The three interpretations mentioned are neither mutually exclusive nor mutually dependent. Nevertheless, the author hypothesises that when mathematics education research considers mathematics and reality as two distinct realms promoting a constructive point of view becomes more likely. Each of the three interpretations mentioned is problematised in the literature against the background of different perspectives. For instance, Voigt (2011, p. 869) asks whether in placing the “real situation” at the beginning of the modelling process—far from mathematics—the ideal of an everyday life orientation is expressed, under which one imagines that mathematics develops out of an everyday life untainted by any mathematics. Such notions are undermined in various contributions to mathematics education research. Niss (1994, p. 371), for example, mentions that mathematics is confronted with a “relevance paradox”. On the one hand, mathematics is becoming more and more relevant and, at the same time, more and more irrelevant, since mathematics plays a pivotal role in the development of technical devices, yet the operation of these technical devices no longer requires mathematical literacy. Keitel’s (1989) pair of terms de-/mathematisation points in the same direction. However, these terms emphasise the social significance of mathematics more strongly and problematise the use of supposedly realistic mathematics tasks in the classroom. Keitel introduces the pair of terms de-/mathematisation to describe those processes leading to mathematics—in terms of mechanisation and automation— increasingly determining our living environment (mathematisation). At the same time, mathematics increasingly disappears from everyday life (demathematisation) since the skills that were previously required are henceforth taken from humans by a technical device. Skovsmose and Borba (2004) critically examine the ideological effect of mathematics and its teaching within social contexts. They argue that if mathematics is considered a perfect system and an infallible tool for solving real problems, political control is in favour. So, the separation between mathematics and reality cannot be understood as a fixed boundary, at least not within social contexts. A domain that is part of the “rest of the world” can be mathematised very soon. Since students gain experience in their mathematised environment way before mathematical concept formation processes take place in the classroom, the everyday life orientation of mathematics education, as outlined by Voigt with critical intent, should rather be rejected. Another problematising perspective on the relationship between mathematics and reality is offered by those historical-philosophical approaches that are usually assigned to postmodernism. These approaches explicate the historical contexts from which a specific, prevailing image of mathematics has emerged. Deleuze (Deleuze, 1994; Deleuze & Guattari, 1987), for instance, sees a problematising side of mathematics alongside the prevailing axiomatising formalisation of mathematics.

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By using historical examples— first and foremost the development of calculus by Leibniz—he elaborates on the possibility of dynamic mathematics emerging from concrete problems (cf. de Freitas, 2013; Smith, 2006). Châtelet (2000) highlights the representational side of mathematics by using historical examples to illustrate several ways in which mathematics’ innovations and concepts are strongly dependent on the mathematical tools and forms of graphic representation used at a given time. In doing so, he interprets diagrams as a section of a sequence of physical gestures and thus relates the formal side of mathematics to its material and, above all, physical basis. De Freitas and Sinclair (2014) take up this idea when they map out their didactics of mathematical concepts. They emphasise the material and ontological side of mathematics in addition to the logical and epistemological. Schürmann (2018a) points in the same direction as he attempts to show that mathematical models, in particular, do not merely serve knowledge, but should also be understood as entities, i.e. in addition to their epistemological function, their ontological side needs consideration, too. Furthermore, Schürmann (2018b) deals with the origin of historical knowledge formations that may have contributed to the separation of mathematics and reality. Using Frege’s logicism and Hilbert’s formalist programs as paradigms (Frege, 1884, 1892; Hilbert, 1903) against the background of what Foucault calls the episteme of modernity (Foucault, 1996) this separation is understood as a reaction to the relativisation of mathematical truth claims within the nineteenth century. The literature cited here clarifies that the boundary between mathematics and reality is historically conditioned. A further problematisation of the separation of mathematics and reality emerges from those empirical studies focusing on individual modelling processes. Regarding these studies, students already consider relationships between the mathematical content and parts of the real world long before setting up a mathematical model. Biehler et  al. (2015) and Meyer and Voigt (2010) give a critique of the analytical separation of mathematics and reality based on this empirical finding.

16.1.2 Focus Since mathematics education research on modelling is largely detached from the philosophical discussion on models, which goes on for more than 100 years,1 this chapter elucidates the separation of mathematics and reality against the background of the philosophy of science on models. Here, the philosophy of science is understood as a subdomain of philosophy in which the validity claims of empirical sciences and mathematics are scrutinised, for  In order to prove this thesis, the author has reviewed the bibliographies of all contributions in the ICTMA volumes published so far. It turns out that none of these contributions refer to relevant works from the philosophy of science. 1

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instance, by reconstructing scientific theories. However, the philosophy of science concerning the humanities (e.g. hermeneutics) is excluded, even though such an approach may be of interest under certain conditions.2 Additionally, the following is mainly about the relationship between mathematics and reality in the context of theories and models. An epistemological question of the perception of reality is not raised here, although it is not intended to deny the importance of fundamental epistemological questions for the understanding of mathematical modelling. The approach is to take up considerations from the philosophy of science on the relationship between theories, models, and reality and apply them to mathematics education research. For this purpose, two central views within analytical philosophy, the syntactic and the semantic view, are juxtaposed and related to mathematical modelling in the classroom. This selection is not intended to question divergent approaches, such as the pragmatic view on models (cf. Gelfert, 2017; Winther, 2016). The restriction to the two views mentioned above is merely for pragmatic reasons. Even these two views can only be outlined here. However, their discussion provides valuable information for answering the following questions: 1. Epistemological question: Is the analytical separation between mathematics and reality, often found in mathematics education research on modelling, tenable as such against the background of analytical philosophy, or does it need to be revised or at least relativised? 2. Methodological question: Does the discussion on the syntactic and semantic view on models and theories offer new insights into the description of mathematical modelling in the classroom? In particular, can methodological tools be derived that describe modelling processes more appropriately and accurately? A third, rather constructive question, arising from an assumed separation between mathematics and reality, is excluded here. It is not asked whether the separation between mathematics and reality supports the learners in the processing of modelling tasks.

16.2 Analysis Large parts of the philosophy of science’s discussion on models have their origins in model theory, a subdomain of mathematical logic. To also grasp scientific models and theories, mathematical logic’s angle, formerly focused on formal languages, was widened. From now on, natural and scientific languages are considered as well, i.e. formal languages are understood as subsets of natural languages.

 Frigg and Salis (2019), for example, compare models with (literary) fiction.

2

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The syntax of a language L consists of its vocabulary and the rules for forming well-defined expressions in L. The semantics of L allows the interpretation of welldefined expressions by mapping them to another relational structure R. Thus, on the one hand, well-defined expressions from L are made comprehensible, and, on the other hand, these expressions can be examined within L for their validity. Then, the distinction between syntax and semantics initially leads to two opposing (but related) views on models and theories, the syntactic and the semantic view. The syntactic view on scientific theories was developed primarily by representatives of the Vienna Circle. Due to this, this view on theories and models is closely connected to logical positivism or logical empiricism,3 which had a huge impact on the philosophy of science in the twentieth century until the 1960s (cf. Gelfert, 2017). Very likely, the achievements of the natural sciences in conjunction with the rapidly developing axiomatic-formal mathematics at the beginning of the twentieth century were decisive for the increasing influence of logical positivism. The semantic view on theories and models has emerged largely in response to the syntactic view and its associated obstacles (some of them will be discussed below). The main difference between the two may be that the syntactic view attempts to describe theory building in an idealised form, while the semantic approach tries to outline theory building in terms of scientific practice. Due to the large amount of literature, it is necessary to select among the authors referred to in this chapter. From the syntactic view, the oeuvre of Rudolf Carnap is considered paradigmatic (Carnap, 1939, 1956, 1958, 1969). The analysis of the semantic view is based on the works of Patrick Suppes (1957, 1960, 1962, 1967).

16.2.1 Carnap’s Syntactic View on Models From Carnap’s (1969, pp. 255 ff., 1958; see also Suppe, 1971) syntactic point of view, theories can be reconstructed based on propositions. A theory is formulated in a language L that consists of two sub-languages, the theoretical language LT and the observational language LO. The descriptive constants of LT are named theoretical terms or t-terms. Those of LO are called “observable” (Carnap, 1969, p.  225), observational terms or o-terms (Carnap, 1969, p. 255). O-terms denote observable objects or processes and the relations between them, e.g. “Zurich”, “cold” and “heavy”. T-terms are those that cannot be explicitly defined by o-terms, i.e. they cannot be derived from perception. Carnap’s given examples are fundamental terms of theoretical physics such as “mass” or “temperature” (Carnap, 1958, p. 237). This distinction leads to three different types of propositions:

 Even though the Vienna Circle’s members did not use the term “logical positivism” for themselves, this chapter does not distinguish between logical positivism and logical empiricism. Creath (2017) points out that a distinction between the two terms along theoretical assumptions and sociological viewpoints cannot be made meaningfully anyway. 3

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1. Observational propositions containing o-terms but no t-terms 2. Mixed propositions containing t-terms and o-terms 3. Theoretical propositions containing t-terms but no o-terms According to this approach, a theory in language L is based on two types of postulates: the theoretical or t-postulates and the correspondence or c-postulates, also called correspondence rules (Carnap, 1969) or protocol theorems (Carnap, 1932). T- postulates are pure t-propositions, i.e. they belong to type (3) of the three types of propositions listed above. T-postulates comprise all fundamental laws of a theory. For instance, these can be the fundamental laws of classical mechanics or the main laws of thermodynamics. T-postulates are therefore the axioms of a theory. They are taken for granted. All statements s that can be derived purely syntactically from the t-postulates also belong to LT. The derivation of such statements is based on syntactic rules, which can contain further rules of formation in addition to mathematical rules. LT in itself has no (empirical) meaning. The meaning of t-terms is only given indirectly using LO. Carnap assumes that o-terms refer to directly observable or at least almost directly observable physical objects or processes and relations between them (Carnap, 1969, pp. 225 ff.). In the following, this direct interpretation will be called d-interpretation. Thus, the semantics of o-terms is directly given. It is not possible to derive empirical statements from theoretical statements, i.e. from propositions of type (3), it is not possible to conclude propositions of type (1) without further ado. Rules are needed, the so-called c-postulates, to connect t-terms with o-terms. For instance, Carnap (1969, p. 233) mentions the measurement of electromagnetic oscillations of a certain frequency, which is made visible by the display of a certain colour. C-postulates thus connect something visible with something invisible. Nevertheless, they do not thereby make the invisible itself visible. The t-term to be interpreted remains theoretical. This kind of interpretation has therefore to be distinguished from the d-interpretation of the o-term. Moreover, the interpretation remains incomplete since it is always possible to establish further rules to connect t-terms with o-terms. Since the interpretation of t-terms using c-postulates is partial, it is called p-interpretation in the following. To Carnap, it is important not to confuse c-postulates with definitions (Carnap, 1956, p.  48). The definition of t-terms itself is theoretical and can only be given adequately within LT. A t-term is interpreted logically within LT, which is why this kind of interpretation is called l-interpretation in the following. It is not possible to define a t- term completely by relating it to o-terms via c-postulates. Carnap gives us the following explanation: The terms of geometry as defined by Hilbert are entirely theoretical. However, if they are used within an empirical theory, their empirical use would have to be introduced with the help of c-postulates. However, no geometric o-term, such as “ray of light” or “taut string”, corresponds to the theoretical properties of the t-term straight line (Carnap, 1969, p. 236). Equipped with this repertoire of concepts, Carnap’s understanding of empirical theories can be defined.

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U. Schürmann A theory is a proposition. This proposition is the conjunction of the two propositions T and C, where T is the conjunction of all t-postulates and C is the conjunction of all c-postulates. (Carnap, 1969, p. 266, translation by the author)

To emphasise this connection, Carnap uses the abbreviation TC for theories. Now that we have a clear and distinctive definition of what Carnap calls a theory, we go on to explicate Carnap’s view on models. Carnap distinguishes descriptive models of physics, which are built from real objects like a model ship, from scientific models in a contemporary sense. As in mathematics and logic, a model in the natural sciences in the twentieth century was understood to be an “abstract, conceptual structure”. In this sense, a model is a simplified description of a (physical, economic, sociological, or other) structure in which abstract concepts are mathematically connected (Carnap, 1969, pp. 174–175). By highlighting the importance of non-Euclidean geometry for physics, especially for the development of the theory of relativity, Carnap infers that it is not disadvantageous for theories if they cannot be visualised without difficulty. In this way, he opposes the idea that models are a sort of visualisation. For Carnap, the visualising character of models is only a makeshift or a didactic aid that merely brings the benefit of being able to think about theories in vivid pictures (Carnap, 1939, p. 210). According to Carnap, models only play a significant role in the development of empirical theories if they establish a connection between LT and LO. These “constructing models” (Carnap, 1959, p. 204) serve the p- interpretation of t-terms and, in this sense, are nothing else than c-postulates.

16.2.2 Suppes’ Semantic View on Models The objections to the syntactic view are numerous (cf. Achinstein, 1963, 1965; Suppe, 1971, 1989, 2000; Suppes, 1967; van Fraassen, 1980; see also Liu, 1997; Winther, 2016). Some of these objections are: 1. The formalisation of theories as linguistic entities is inadequate and obscures the underlying structures of theories. 2. Theory testing is oversimplified in the syntactic view since it is assumed that propositions from LO can be directly linked to phenomena. 3. The pure distinction between o- and t-terms is not tenable if the characterisation of o-terms or t-terms is insufficient. 4. P-interpretation remains undefined and all possible ways to define p-interpretation lead to inconsistencies in the syntactic view. The semantic view on theories and models can essentially be understood as a reaction to the shortcomings of the syntactic view outlined here (Gelfert, 2017; Portides, 2017). Thus, the meta-mathematical description of theories through formal languages is (largely) rejected in the semantic view. While the syntactic view tries to describe scientific theories in logical languages, the semantic approach asks what

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kind of mathematical models are used in the sciences (Winther, 2016). Mathematical tools are available for the direct analysis of such structures. In contrast, a reformulation of a theory in a specific formal language tends to be impractical, especially for those theories with rather complicated structures (Suppes, 1957, pp. 248–249). Moreover, a direct description of mathematical structures may be independent of a particular language. From Suppes’ semantic point of view, a theory is composed of a set of set-theoretic structures satisfying the different linguistic formulations of a theory. Worth mentioning that besides this conception of the semantic view, at least one differing semantic approach—the so-called state-space approach—exists (e.g. van Fraassen, 1980), which describes physical systems by vectors. In the semantic view, a model of a theory is a structure and should not be confused with the linguistic description of that structure. Propositions of a theory, expressed in a particular linguistic formulation, are merely interpreted within that structure. [A] model of a theory may be defined as a possible realization in which all valid sentences of the theory are satisfied, and a possible realization of the theory is an entity of the appropriate set-theoretical structure. (Suppes, 1962; see also Suppes, 1957, 1960, p. 253)

This emphasises the importance of models for theory building, and along with it the importance of nonlinguistic structures overall. Furthermore, Suppes points out that theories cannot be related directly to experimental data. Accordingly, the d-interpretation of o-terms in experimental settings is dismissed. Rather, this connection is only established indirectly via what Suppes calls models of data (Suppes, 1962). While models of a theory are possible realisations of a theory, models of data are possible realisations of experimental data. By this conception, Suppes circumvents objection (2), as listed above. In addition, even if a hierarchy between these different types of models is assumed, they are nevertheless connected by an isomorphism between the two types of models (for a critique of this connection by isomorphism, see Suárez, 2003). Objections (3) and (4) are discussed in more detail in the following sections “Theoretical and Empirical Concepts” and “Correspondence Rules and Partial Interpretation”.

16.2.3 Theoretical and Empirical Concepts The separation between o- and t-terms is challenged from different perspectives. Putnam (1962), for instance, indicates the possibility of formulating theories that do not contain any t-terms. He quotes Darwin’s theory of evolution as an example. He thus questions whether the separation of LO and LT is at all necessary. Consequently, theories that manage without t-terms could also not be reconstructed as the proposition TC in Carnap’s sense. Putnam then goes on to say that the mere distinction between o- and t-terms is not sufficient at all. He points out that terms that do not belong to LO cannot be considered t- terms automatically.

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Moreover, it is unclear which criterion separates LT from LO. Carnap assumes that from a pragmatic point of view, a clear distinction can usually be made between the two (Carnap, 1969, p. 255). It is only decisive whether a term designates a directly or at least indirectly observable entity. Otherwise, it is a t-term. According to Achinstein (1965), this criterion is not exhaustive. For instance, an electron, usually a non-observable term, can be considered observable in certain contexts and under certain conditions. He concludes that the term electron cannot be unambiguously assigned to either LT or LO. Rather, the conditions for o-terms must be made explicit in more detail. Therefore, Achinstein discusses another criterion that could justify the separation into o- and t-terms. T-terms could be distinguished from o-terms based on their theoretical character (cf. Hanson, 1958). According to this distinction, a term would be theory-laden and thus a t-term if it cannot be understood without its theoretical background. To Achinstein, even this distinction is not sufficient to divide o- and t-terms more clearly. A term can be essential in the context of a certain theory, while in another corresponding theory, it is rather independent. Thus, for each term, it must be made clear which theory in particular forms the background. Putnam (1962) also argues that there are no terms that belong exclusively to LO. For instance, the colour red, which is considered an o-term in everyday language, is a t-term (red corpuscles) in Newton’s corpuscular theory of light. So, the question is posed how to define t-terms more precisely. Another criticism of the syntactic view deals with the possibility to make a theory-free perception at all. This focuses upon the syntactic view’s assumption that o-terms can be interpreted by direct or at least indirect observation of real phenomena. Seen from the syntactic perspective, o-terms must be interpreted with direct reference to real phenomena, since indirect observation by instruments already implies l-interpretation. To perceive objects without recourse to a theoretical background is questioned by other authors. Can there be such a thing as mere observation or does observation always require interpretation of sensory impressions? Hanson (1958, pp.  5–13) gives us various examples here: two biologists looking at an amoeba may see different things because of their different theoretical backgrounds, Tycho Brahe who would not recognise the telescope in a cylinder, as Kepler presumably would, etc. Hanson goes on by describing optical perceptions. He explains that seeing as a mere perception on the retina is always already an interpretation as soon as it enters consciousness. This also illustrates that observational concepts cannot be related to objects directly.

16.2.4 Correspondence Rules and Partial Interpretation According to the syntactic view, o-terms are connected to t-terms by correspondence rules (Carnap’s c-postulates). The assumption is that correspondence rules are the p-interpretation of a t-term. However, not all t-terms of a theory have to be

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partially interpretable. While an o-term must always be directly interpretable, t-terms may exist without c-postulate partially interpreting them. Such t-terms are only indirectly connected with LO by being connected in LT with other t-terms that can be partially interpreted. For instance, the square root of 2 is unobservable. Nevertheless, it can be indirectly connected with o-terms via an l-interpretation if it is interpreted as the side length of the square with the area 2. For the c-postulates of a theory, Carnap (1956) formulates the following rules. 1. The set of c-postulates of a theory must be finite. 2. All c-postulates must be logically compatible with the t-postulates. 3. The c-postulates do not contain terms neither belonging to LT nor to LO. 4. Each c-postulate must contain at least one t-term and o-term. However, apart from the explanation by examples and these rules for c-postulates, Carnap does not define more clearly what is meant by p-interpretation. This lack of clarification is criticised by various authors (cf. Achinstein, 1963, 1965; Putnam, 1962). Hence, Putnam discusses three ways to define p-interpretation: 1. [T]o ‘partially interpret’ a theory is to specify a non-empty class of intended models. If the specified class has one member, the interpretation is complete; if more than one, properly partial. 2. To partially interpret a term P could mean […] to specify a verification-refutation procedure. 3. Most simply, one might say that to partially interpret a formal language is to interpret part of the language (e.g. to provide translations into common language for some terms and leave the others mere dummy symbols). (Putnam, 1962) Definition 1  Putnam objects to the first definition. To define a class of models similar in structure to the theory in parts, (a) mathematical concepts, theoretical by definition, are required, and the argument would become circular. Furthermore, he points out (b) that models require certain broad-spectrum terms (e.g. physical object or physical quantity). Such terms cannot be defined a priori, as Quine (1957) illustrates by the meta-concept “science”. Accordingly, it is possible that such terms do not acquire their meaning through p-interpretation in a particular model, but within a theoretical framework based on the conventions of a research community. Consequently, logical positivists like Carnap must reject such concepts as metaphysical. Ultimately, it refers (c) to the problem that a theory with an empty class of models can no longer be called false, but merely meaningless. Definition 2  According to Putnam, the second understanding of p-interpretation also proves to be unsustainable. If for every concept or proposition a procedure for its confirmation or its refutation is specified, this would lead to curious statements against the background of the philosophical position of verificationism as advocated by Carnap. According to verificationism, only those (synthetic) statements may be true that can be empirically verified. Using the example of the sun and the helium it contains, Putnam draws attention to the following problem. Although it is possible to prove that the sun contains helium, no procedure can be used to prove that helium

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exists in every part of the sun. If this confirming or refuting procedure is missing, the truth value is indeterminate. In consequence, one would have to claim that the sun contains helium, whereas it cannot be said for parts of the sun, whether there is helium or not. Definition 3  The third and last possible definition of p-interpretation, that LT is only interpreted in parts, is rejected by Putnam in just one sentence. Such a view would lead to certain theoretical terms ultimately having no meaning at all. A part of LT would be interpreted into everyday language, for example, and the remaining part of the t-terms would merely consist of dummy terms.

16.3 Modelling in Mathematics Classroom from a Syntactic Point of View In the following, mathematical modelling in the classroom is interpreted against the background of Carnap’s syntactic view, while bearing in mind criticism from a semantic point of view. For that, the posed epistemological and methodological questions are focused. Since Carnap’s syntactic view first and foremost describes an ideal of empirical sciences, modifications must be made to transfer this to modelling in mathematics education. Axiomatised mathematics cannot be assumed for mathematics teaching, but mathematics in LT that students master. Furthermore, it is not assumed that an understanding of mathematics in Carnap’s formal sense prevails among the students. To describe a modelling process, it is sufficient to reformulate students’ usage of terms in Carnap’s sense. In this context, mathematical terms used by students in theoretical regards are classified as t-terms. Those that refer to observable objects are classified as o- terms. The problem of theoretical terms is serious. Nevertheless, when it comes to mathematical modelling, most of the terms used are mathematical terms and therefore of theoretical nature. Thus, mathematical concepts in school also have a certain theoretical character if students can l-interpretate them to a certain extent. Likewise, students can understand that mathematical concepts are in principle unobservable, even if they can be illustrated. However, Achinstein’s (1963, 1965) and Putnam’s (1962) objections to the separation of theoretical and empirical terms remain considered insofar that the t-terms used in the context of mathematical modelling are always t-theoretical. In means of students’ modelling processes, this implies that t-terms are dependent on the mathematics available to students. Even when transferring Carnap’s syntactic view to the description of learners’ mathematical modelling, Putnam’s objections (1962, p. 245) to different definitions of p- interpretation are still considered. If p-interpretation of mathematical terms is considered as building a set of intended models, theoretical terms are required indeed. However, this science-theoretical problem concerns the consistency of the syntactic view of theory building. This problem may be less important when it comes to p-interpretation within modelling processes taking place in the mathematics

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classroom. In fact, trying to provide an appropriate procedure for confirming or refuting each t-term can lead to some odd statements. For modelling problems in the classroom, however, this can also be a rather subordinate problem. Mathematics lessons usually consider those parts of reality for which such confirmation or refutation procedures exist. Furthermore, the third definition of p-interpretation, interpreting parts of LT and leaving the remaining terms aside, is rather a duty for mathematics teaching than a real objection. Every t-term of mathematics should be made semantically accessible to students. Here, the psychological argument is that interpretation of mathematical content through its application leads to an improved and deeper understanding of such content (cf. Blum, 1996, p. 21–22).

16.3.1 Epistemological Question The purpose of this chapter is to prove if the separation between mathematics and reality, often found in mathematics education research on modelling, is tenable as such against the background of analytical philosophy. By discussing Carnap’s syntactic view of theories and models, it becomes clear that this separation needs to be revised. Carnap’s syntactic view captures more precisely the connection between mathematics and reality. In contrast to the dichotomous separation between mathematics and reality in many modelling cycles, there is at least a twofold gradation from mathematics in LT, via empirical-mathematical concepts in LO, to real-world phenomena. In a modelling process, (school) mathematics is to be understood as the theoretical (part of a) language with which students can proceed syntactically. Reality, or the “rest of the world”, is henceforth divided into an observational language, which itself is not yet a reality, and a part that is identified with real-world phenomena (Fig. 16.3). Bearing this picture in mind, the criticism of many so-called modelling tasks in mathematics textbooks can be justified by the fact that no real problem is actually solved by the students in the context of a modelling process. Most likely, those tasks take place only in the sphere of theoretical and observational language. While the translation process between these two parts of the language is crucial for making sense of pure mathematical concepts, it does not involve any connection to real-­ world phenomena. This insight is probably obscured by an overly simplistic juxtaposition of reality and mathematics in many modelling cycles. Moreover, Carnap’s interpretation of models in science as c-postulates, marking the area between theoretical and observational language, and Suppes’ objection that models of data, marking the area between observational language and real-world phenomena, have to be considered as well. While three models appear in the modelling cycle proposed by Blum and Leiß (“situation model” and “real model” in the realm of reality, and “mathematical model” in the realm of mathematics, Fig. 16.2), we can now capture more accurately the nature of models in mathematical modelling processes. Models are translation rules both for the translation between

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Fig. 16.3 Carnap’s syntactic view on theories visualised

theoretical and observational language and for the translation between real-world phenomena and observational language. Here, the crucial point is that the connection between the two domains of the language at issue is given by assumed rules, not by nature. This finding circumvents lots of epistemological obstacles (e.g. questions about the nature of mathematical terms and their possible empirical origin do not need to be answered for the syntactic view to work). Finally, the competencies described in the modelling cycle can now be interpreted against the background of the previous discussion of theories and models. Working mathematically (step 4 in the modelling cycle according to Blum & Leiß, 2006) can be identified with the l-interpretation, mathematising as a transition from the “rest of the world” to “mathematics” (step 3, ibid.) and interpreting as a transition into the opposite direction (step 5, ibid.) is associated with Carnap’s p-interpretation. The decisive difference is that p-interpretation does not indicate the transition from mathematics to reality and vice versa but only a transition between two parts of a language. The d- interpretation is pivotal in making the transition from LO to real-world phenomena (step 1, ibid.). Here, models of data are crucial. It becomes obvious why, as Meyer and Voigt (2010) note, connections from mathematics need to be considered already in the step of simplification. Learners work with o-terms in the step of simplification. However, these must be connected, even implicitly, with t-terms. They form what Voigt (2011) calls the “intermediate area”.

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16.3.2 Methodological Question The methodological question of whether the discussion on the syntactic and semantic views on models and theories offers new insights for the description of mathematical modelling in the classroom can now be answered against the background of the previous discussion. The goal is to derive methodological tools that describe modelling processes more appropriately and accurately compared to standard modelling cycles. To this end, Carnap’s syntactic view and Suppes’ criticism of it are considered. One of the main objections to the syntactic view is that the formalisation of theories as linguistic entities tends to be inadequate because it obscures the underlying structures of theories. While this objection may be crucial for discussion in the philosophy of science, the attempt to focus on the underlying (mathematical) structures tends to be a hindrance when it comes to empirical research in mathematics education. Students’ utterances (written, spoken, or expressed by gestures) can be directly observed, whereas the underlying mathematical structures can only be conjectured. With its distinction between theoretical and observational terms, the syntactic view provides a tool for a more detailed analysis of students’ utterances. For instance, when a student uses the word “triangle”, it is decisive whether the word is used in a theoretical way, for example, in a mathematical theorem, or whether it is used in a sentence to describe real-world phenomena. At this point, Suppes’ objection to the theoretical-observational distinction must be considered. The discussion in the section on “Theoretical and Empirical Concepts” shows very briefly that it cannot be said that a concept, by its nature, belongs to either LT or LO. Nevertheless, the distinction holds when the theoretical or observational character of a term is considered against the background of the theory T in question. Stegmüller’s (1970) solution to this problem is that a term can be called T-theoretical (or T-observable) in the case that T is the theory under consideration. The theoretical character of a term depends on the theory we are talking about. Carnap’s definition of a theory (TC is the conjunction of T and C, while T is the conjunction of all t-postulates and C is the conjunction of all c-postulates) reminds us that a clear description of the theoretical background taught to students is necessary when mathematical modelling processes are captured empirically. The question is what theoretical tools (i.e. mathematical theorems, procedures, etc.) are on the theoretical side and what correspondence rules for translation between LT and LO are accessible to students. In order to take a closer look at students’ modelling processes, it is necessary to reconsider Carnaps’ notion of the connection between LT and LO given by c-postulates. Although for Carnap, an ideal theory only includes c-postulates, i.e. axioms that translate between LT and LO, he points out that it is not essential for this connection that correspondence rules have the character of an axiom. The particular form chosen for the rules C is not essential. They might be formulated as rules of inference or as postulates. (Carnap, 1956, p. 47)

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We can thus distinguish between the individual mental models expressed in students’ utterances and the more normative models thought in class to make sense of pure mathematical concepts and to give students the ability to solve real-world problems. From a normative point of view, it is necessary to describe rather abstract models that fit a wide range of situations. This involves the four rules for the formation of c- postulates (see section “Correspondence Rules and Partial Interpretation”). Under these conditions, the goal is to formulate as many (but still independent) c-postulates as possible, so that as many situations as possible that fit a notion of pure mathematics are covered by a certain set of c-postulates. Putnam’s main objections to this understanding of partial interpretation (specifying a class of intended models) are that (a) pure mathematical terms (e.g. set) are needed and the procedure would become circular, and that (b) broad-spectrum terms are needed (e.g. physical object, physical quantity, etc.) that cannot be defined a priori and whose meaning cannot be given by partial interpretation via correspondence rules. While these objections can seriously affect the syntactic view when the focus is on the normative description of an ideal theory, they tend not to negatively affect the goal of describing students’ modelling processes. Rather, these objections remind us that every description of individual modelling processes and even the establishment of normative models are limited by the framing through inherently broad-spectrum terms and (meta-) mathematical terms in use. Bearing in mind, that correspondence rules not necessarily need to be formulated in a set of axioms, this offers an opportunity to analyse students’ (implicit) use of correspondence rules in modelling processes. As we will see, this provides a methodological tool that leads to different results than the analyses that depend on standard modelling cycles and their inherent epistemological assumptions. Let us take a look at the mathematics task from a textbook for fifth and sixth graders: The African grey parrot can grow up to 40 cm long; a flamingo of about 200 cm. How many times bigger is the flamingo compared to the grey parrot? (Prediger, 2009, p. 6, translation by the author)

From a normative point of view, the area of mathematics addressed in this task can be narrowed down to the structure of natural numbers in connection with multiplication (N, ·). On the observational side, questions can be formulated such as “how often does one length fit into another?” or “how many times larger is this length compared to another?”. The connection between LT and LO is then given by a p-interpretation containing at least two c-rules. Thus, c-rule c1 connects—for instance—the number 1 with the observable length of 1 cm, while c-rule c2 connects multiplication with a temporal- successive action (e.g. “an empirical length is juxtaposed until the length used for comparison is reached”). The model at issue here is the description of the structure (N, ·) using the linguistic means from LO, given by c1 and c2. If T is the conjunction of all true propositions in LT about the structure (N, ·) and C is the conjunction of c1 and c2, the theoretical background of the task is given by the conjunction TC. This interpretation of (N, ·) by c1 and c2 remains partial. In contrast, an l-interpretation of (N, ·) within LT, (e.g. as the addition

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of equal addends) is complete. Again, it should be mentioned that c1 and c2 do not connect mathematics with reality, but theoretical terms of mathematics (t-terms) with empirical terms (o-terms). Hence, it is a purely linguistic connection. With this revision of the task in mind, we can now analyse individual utterances of students confronted with this task. To do this, individual modelling is analysed by reconstructing the reasoning within the modelling according to the Toulmin scheme (Toulmin, 1996). Thereby, the use of c-rules—whether implicit or explicit—has to be taken into account. Due to the limitation of a book chapter, the focus is on a single case study, the student Anton. Anton is interviewed while solving the task (cf. Prediger, 2009). At the beginning of the interview, Anton soon says, “The flamingo is 160 cm taller”. The genesis of this statement can be reconstructed with the help of the Toulmin scheme as follows (Fig. 16.4). Against the background of common modelling cycles, Anton’s statement must be interpreted as an individual construction of whether a situation model, a real model, or a mathematical model. However, a rational reconstruction shows that none of Anton’s possible considerations can be the mere result of modelling processes taking place exclusively in the “rest of the world”. Anton’s statement cannot be interpreted without (implicit) translations between LT and LO.

Fig. 16.4 Anton’s statement rationally reconstructed

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16.4 Conclusion and Outlook Against the background of the syntactic view on theories and models and its critique by the adherents of the semantic view of theory building, mainstream modelling cycles and their inherent epistemological assumptions about the relation between mathematics and reality have been problematised. The goal of the chapter is to show that the description of students’ modelling processes cannot rely on a simple separation between mathematics and reality. The syntactic view, as offered by Carnap, indicates that distinguishing between the theoretical and observational side of a language can be helpful in capturing the translation processes of students that take place when mental models are used to interpret pure mathematical terms, and vice versa, to interpret the empirical part of a language through the means of mathematics. Based on a single case study, it was shown that the twofold separation between LT and LO and the connection via c-rules—in combination with Toulmin’s scheme— provides a methodological tool to investigate students’ translations between mathematics understood as a theoretical language and everyday language and the empirical use of mathematical terms contained therein. In detail, this attempt allows us to reconstruct also those more implicit translation steps that are necessary to explain subsequent explicit utterances and that would remain hidden against the background of mainstream modelling cycles. To give an outlook: While this brief chapter has paid attention to the multiple translations between the theoretical and empirical sides of a language used in modelling processes, the connection of o-terms with real-world phenomena was omitted to a large extent. In order to get a comprehensive picture of all the translations taking place in modelling processes, this connection needs to be described and problematised in more detail. Follow-up questions arise when not only the epistemological and ontological aspects but also constructive aspects of mathematical modelling are considered. Here, questions may arise concerning the design of textbook tasks to promote students’ modelling skills, the teaching of adequate models for proper connection between pure mathematical terms and everyday language, and whether and what meta-knowledge about mathematical modelling should be taught in the class.

References Achinstein, P. (1963). Theoretical terms and partial interpretation. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 14(54), 89–10. Achinstein, P. (1965). The problem of theoretical terms. American Philosophical Quarterly, 2(3), 193–203. Biehler, R., Kortemeyer, J., & Schaper, N. (2015). Conceptualizing and studying students’ processes of solving typical problems in introductory engineering courses requiring mathematical competences. In K. Krainer & N. Vondrová (Eds.), Proceedings of the ninth congress of the European Society for Research in mathematics education (pp. 2060–2066). Charles University, Faculty of Education.

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Chapter 17

Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) in Mathematics Education: Reconfiguring and Rethinking the Philosophy of Mathematics for the Twenty-First Century Hui-Chuan Li

17.1 Background The aspect that emphasises a focus on sustainable development to transform education is not new, as formal education, for at least the last 50 years, has been challenged to engage with a range of economic, social, and environmental concerns. The United Nations (UN) calls for the inclusion of sustainable development into all areas of teaching and learning can date back to Agenda 21 (UN, 1992). In Agenda 21, it identified four major imperatives to begin the work of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD): (1) improve basic education, (2) reorient existing education to address sustainable development, (3) develop public understanding and awareness, and (4) training (ibid, 1992). The term ESD has been used internationally and by UNESCO to refer to the incorporation of information on sustainable development into the curriculum, information on issues such as climate change, disaster risk reduction, biodiversity, poverty reduction, and sustainable consumption. Over the past two decades, formal education systems have begun to take ESD into account as part of their responsibility (Li & Tsai, 2022). For instance, the international ESD agenda has informed curriculum developments in Australia and Scotland. Sustainability as a cross-­curricular priority was introduced into Australia’s curriculum in 2010. In Scotland, “Learning for Sustainability (LfS) [is] cross-cutting themes in Scotland’s CfE [Curriculum for Excellence] which provides an overarching philosophical, pedagogical and practical framework for embedding ESD in the school curriculum” (Bamber et al., 2016, p.  5). LfS as a core component of teachers’ professional standards has been

H.-C. Li (*) Moray House School of Education and Sport University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_17

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embedded at all levels of Scottish Education since 2012 in response to UNESCO’s call for action. The Global Action Programme (GAP) on ESD, which ran from 2015 to 2019, deployed a two-fold approach to multiply and to scale up the ESD action: 1. To reorient education and learning so that everyone has the opportunity to acquire the knowledge, skills, values and attitudes that empower them to contribute to sustainable development. 2. To strengthen education and learning in all agendas, programmes and activities that promote sustainable development (UNESCO, 2018). In 2015, all the UN member states have approved the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. This Agenda is an ambitious plan that sets out for countries, the UN system, and all other actors to stimulate action over the period 2016 to 2030. It consists of 17 interconnected Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), further broken down into 169 targets, to be met by 2030 with the intention of achieving inclusive, people-centred, and sustainable development with no one left behind. The concept of ESD has also brought a new focus to education policy and practice, often referred to as adjectival education, for example, development education, global citizenship education, peace education, environmental education, and climate change education (Evans, 2019). The overarching goal of ESD is to integrate an awareness of sustainable development issues into all aspects of education so that students are empowered to make informed decisions in their daily lives. In the 2030 Agenda for sustainable development (UN, 2015), it stipulates that by 2030 all learners must: Acquire knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development, including among others through education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence, global citizenship, and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s contribution to sustainable development. (p.19)

How can mathematics education help learners of all ages to respond to sustainable development challenges, to lead healthy lives, to nurture sustainable livelihoods, and to achieve human fulfilment for all? The answer is not straightforward because moving toward a mathematics education that incorporates ESD requires a paradigm shift in the philosophy of mathematics in general (Ernest, 2018; Skovsmose, 2019) and in the objective of mathematics education in particular (Gellert et  al., 2018; Lyons et  al., 2003). Without a philosophy for incorporating ESD into mathematics education, it is not reasonable to expect teachers to appreciate that they—in addition to teaching the subject—also have a responsibility to provide students with opportunities to apply newly gained subject matter expertise to the wider societal, ecological, equity, and economic issues that they encounter outside the classroom. Therefore, this chapter first will review the current state of ESD in mathematics education. Second, it will look at philosophical theories that have been developed to explain the meaning of mathematics with respect to what mathematics is and what

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it means to understand mathematics. Third, it will discuss issues about equity and social justice in mathematics education. Fourth, it will talk about interdisciplinary learning and STEM education and draw attention to the question of whether the existing philosophical views of mathematics can be applied to understand the role of mathematics in interdisciplinary learning and/or STEM education. Finally, it will call for reconfiguring and rethinking the philosophy of mathematics for the twenty-­ first century, followed by a concluding remark.

17.2 Current State of Education for Sustainable Development in Mathematics Education We live in the dawning of the information age, and we must ask what set of skills will be most appropriate for the twenty-first century and beyond. As the complexity of daily life increases, the balance shifts in favour of skills such as critical and creative thinking. As our social interactions become more diverse, globalised, and virtual, the balance shifts increasingly in favour of collaboration and communication. Moreover, we live during an emerging climate crisis, one which has led to a growing demand for us to attend to the problems of ecological sustainability. ESD, as defined by UNESCO, emphasises students’ engagement in discussion, analysis, and the application of learning and knowledge through interdisciplinary activities (Laurie et  al., 2016). It mandates the use of participatory, interdisciplinary teaching and learning methods. The objective is to promote competencies such as critical thinking, imagining future scenarios and making decisions in a collaborative way, with the aim of empowering learners to take informed decisions and responsible actions for environmental integrity, economic viability, and a just society, for present and future generations, while respecting cultural diversity (UNESCO, 2012). While there is general agreement on the benefits of a sustainable mathematic education (e.g. Renert, 2011), there is a lack of clarity on what it is or what it looks like in the twenty-first century (Gellert, 2011; Li & Tsai, 2022; Petocz & Reid, 2003). Research has reported that incorporating ESD into mathematics education is proving difficult because lessons that involve sustainable development discussion and interdisciplinary activities are time-consuming and they can be challenging to teach, even for experienced teachers (Li & Tsai, 2022). In addition, the widespread interest in ESD has led to different terms and concepts being used to express the idea of sustainable development in students’ learning. Researchers across a wide range of subjects (including mathematics) understand the concept of ESD in the curriculum in a variety of different ways (Petocz & Reid, 2003). The integration of ESD into the teaching and learning of mathematics is, however, more controversial— for example, ESD integration is especially problematic given that the UNESCO definition includes objectives whose implementation is the subject of contentious political debate, objectives such as the reduction of poverty and the establishment of equity and social justice.

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ESD, as defined by UNESCO, is an interdisciplinary approach to learning and teaching that develops students’ knowledge in collaborative and novel ways with the aim of empowering them to see sustainable development as a way of thinking about the world, as a way of guiding their actions and decision-making processes— as far as ESD is concerned, the development of proficiency in mathematics is not the objective. However, in school mathematics, national curriculum assessments play a powerful role in providing criterion measures of attainment for both students and schools, and results are often used by policymakers for school accountability purposes (e.g. Department of Education, 2020). Moreover, enhancing academic outcomes by “teaching to the test” in mathematics education has become an increasingly common phenomenon in many education systems across the world (Tsai & Li, 2017). Yaro et al. (2020) state that the teachers in their project would discount or downplay the mathematical tasks for peace and sustainability, as they viewed those tasks “as outside the realm of formal school sanctioned activities” (p.227). Indeed, teachers may be concerned by the social justice component of ESD, by the requirement to pursue an interdisciplinary approach rather than a teacher-centred approach, by the need to gain subject matter expertise in subjects other than mathematics, and by the necessity of omitting some existing material from the current mathematics curriculum if time constraints are to be satisfied. The disparity between the formal school curriculum and ESD approaches invites me to examine whether a sustainable mathematics education is acceptable, or is indeed necessary, and, perhaps, to rethink what a vision for mathematics education should be in the twenty-first century. How might mathematics contribute to our understanding of, and our responses to, sustainable development challenges? Earlier, Gellert (2011) calls for “new mathematics to improve our perception, control and regulation of the problematic situation” (p.20). More recently, Barwell and Hauge (2021) point out that critical mathematics education research has paid little attention to questions of environmental sustainability and contend: [F]or mathematics education to adequately address issues like climate change, ideas from critical mathematics education need to be supplemented with a theorisation of the nature of science and its role in society in the context of complex environmental problems such as the threat of climate change. (p.169)

Therefore, as a starting point for thinking about the connection between mathematics and climate change, Barwell and Hauge propose a set of principles for teaching mathematics in the context of climate change based on critical mathematics education and on the theory of post-normal science, as shown in Table 17.1. Li and Tsai (2022) point out that, at present, the integration of ESD into mathematics education is the exception rather than the rule and suggest that one reason for this hesitancy is that there are no existing philosophic theories for doing so, as ESD integration would require a redefinition of the scope of mathematics. It is thus worth revisiting the questions of what mathematics is and what it means to understand mathematics.

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Table 17.1  Principles for teaching mathematics in the context of climate change Forms of authenticity

Forms of participation

Reflecting on and with mathematics

Students should have opportunities to use problems about climate change that students find relevant in their lives Students should have opportunities to work with real data as much as possible Students’ own ideas and values should have a central role Students should have opportunities to engage in meaningful debate relating to climate change Students should participate in mathematics Students should actively participate in their classrooms Students should actively participate in their communities Students should actively engage with and participate in public debate Students should have opportunities to reflect on how mathematics is useful Students should have opportunities to reflect on the limits of mathematics Students should consider the role of values in mathematics

Adapted from Barwell and Hauge (2021), p.177

17.3 What Mathematics Is and What It Means to Understand Mathematics What is mathematics? It is hard to answer this question since there are a variety of philosophical theories that have been developed to explain the meaning of mathematics with respect to what mathematics is—for example, logicism, intuitionism, formalism, Platonism, constructivism, and Husserlian phenomenology. To logicists, mathematics, or part of it, is essentially logic (Russell, 1902). However, intuitionists contend that, rather than logic, mathematics should be defined as a mental activity (Snapper, 1979). For formalists, the subject matter of mathematics is its symbols, which are neither of logic nor of intuition (Giaquinto, 2002). Platonism is based on the idea that mathematics is “conceived of as a pure body of knowledge, independent of its environment, and value- free” (Renert, 2011, p.20). From the Platonist perspective, mathematics holds the key to certain, indubitable knowledge. However, the certainty of Platonism has been questioned by a number of mathematicians and philosophers (Ernest, 1991, 2021; Zakaria & Iksan, 2007). For example, social constructivists have argued that mathematics is the theory of form and structure that arises within language and mathematical applications play an integral role in human social life. Husserlian phenomenologists consider mathematical experience a constitutional explanation that analyses the ideal structures involved in our meaningful experience of the world. Hartimo (2006) highlights that “to Husserl, investigating the origin of the concepts of number and multiplicity means giving a detailed description of the related concrete phenomena and the process of abstraction from the concrete phenomena” (p.329). Phenomenologists in mathematics education do not attempt to start from individual components and posit any further entities but analyse the perception for conscious representation of a spatiotemporal world. In Husserl’s The

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Crisis of the European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology published by the Cambridge University Press (Moran, 2012), Husserl is concerned over how the scientific application of formal mathematics had changed the very conception of modernity and argues that the world for us all should be one that allows for mutual understanding, for action, and for the development of communicative rationality. Ernest (2020) asserts that the philosophy of mathematics has largely concerned itself with pure mathematics, although, in recent years, it has started to focus on the issues associated with applied mathematics. Indeed, some researchers, such as Hardy (1967), focus on pure mathematics, an abstract neutral subject that has value independent of possible applications. However, others, such as Skovsmose (2019), have focused on applied mathematics and the impact that mathematics has on human life. Pure mathematics consists of abstract mathematical objects and is essentially an art, a creative process, one in which its learners have to envisage what putative sequence of steps might lead from a set of premises to a conclusion— deductive reasoning plays a role equivalent to the artist’s paintbrush. Nevertheless, this perspective, influenced by Platonism, considers neither the methods used to teach mathematics nor the role of mathematics in modelling physical, environmental, and ecological processes (Li & Tsai, 2022). For example, almost everything taught in school mathematics—from arithmetic to algebra, to differential calculus— involves to some extent the use of deductive reasoning, a skill that is useful for decision-making in general. However, too often the focus is on memorising the steps required to solve a particular class of problems—without an appreciation of the modelling of real-world scenarios. Skovsmose (2019) offers a performative perspective on the philosophy of mathematics. Ravn and Skovsmose (2019) have developed the position that mathematics is performative in the sense that its adoption and application by human beings can inform decision-making, leading to altered political priorities and transformed social realities. The mathematical modelling of real-world scenarios encourages a careful consideration of what factors are relevant and which ones are more or less important—it discourages decision-making driven by emotion and impulsive, instinctive patterns of thought. The use of mathematical modelling and measurement is performative, and through its application, mathematics plays an integral role in human social life (Ernest, 2020; Jankvist & Niss, 2020; Hagena, 2015; Skovsmose, 2019). Nevertheless, such an integral role of mathematics in the society has not yet been widely accepted. For example, in a TV show, a mathematician was asked: “What is the point of your practice?” and “What are your social responsibilities?”. The mathematician answered: The point of mathematics is to pursue mathematical truth. This is truth about the perfect world of mathematical objects, which are timeless, perfect and exist in their own realm, untouched by material changes and decay. The truth we pursue can be exquisitely beautiful, but we are merciless in our rigour and only the most robust proofs can be accepted as demonstrating the truth of our results. Our responsibility is to pursue mathematical knowledge and beauty beyond all earthly bounds, knowing that we enrich human culture inestimably. Although our responsibilities end with the pursuit of mathematics for its own sake, it often turns out that the most abstract theories have surprising and very fruitful applications in science, technology and in modelling the physical world. But this is a happy

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accident, discovered only after we have revealed the truth. We pursue truth and beauty, but the only good we have to worry about is being good mathematicians. (cited from Ernest, 2021, p.3)

Ernest (2021) prompted by the mathematician’s interview above and raised questions as to “Does mathematics only have to concern itself with truth and beauty and not with the good of humanity in a broader sense? Has mathematics no social responsibilities, no debt to the society that nurtures and funds it? Is ethics irrelevant to pure mathematics, as many mathematicians think?” (p.3). Ernest’s questions draw my attention to the important question of what social responsibilities mathematics should have in the society, which I will discuss in more detail below.

17.4 Equity, Social Justice, and Mathematics Education Equity and social justice are core components of ESD. However, as Naresh and Kasmer (2018) argue, “mathematics in school settings is mostly perceived and presented as an elite body of knowledge stripped of its rich social, cultural, and historical connections” (p.309). Berry (2018) used an analysis-critical race theory as a lens to critically examine policies and reforms in mathematics education in the US over the past few decades and concluded: Economic, technological, and security interests were, and continue to be, drivers of many policies and reforms. These policies and reforms situated mathematics education in a nationalistic position of being color-blind, in a context where race, racism, conditions, and contexts do not matter […]. Despite the evidence that racism and marginalization exist in schools and communities, many still adhere to the belief that color-blind policies and pedagogical practices will best serve all students. (p.16)

A recent report published in 2018 by the Social Mobility Commission in the UK revealed that “the attainment gap [in mathematics] widens as disadvantaged children fall further behind” (Social Mobility Commission, 2018, p.6). Research on the links between post-16 students’ earnings progression and social and economic development has shown consistently that a disproportionately high number of disadvantaged students experience poor earnings progression (e.g. Department for Education, 2018). This inequality is concerning, especially as it can increase the risk of violent conflict (Montacute, 2020; Poverty Analysis Discussion Group, 2012). The Smith review published in 2017 by the Department of Education in England has confirmed that mathematics has a uniquely privileged status in society which has a big impact on future earnings: There is strong demand for mathematical and quantitative skills in the labour market at all levels […] Adults with basic numeracy skills earn higher wages and are more likely to be employed than those who fail to master basic quantitative skills. Higher levels of achievement in mathematics are associated with higher earnings for individuals and higher productivity. (Smith, 2017, p.6)

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Questions arise as to “whether mathematics education contributes to social injustices and whether equity in mathematics education is an economic necessity or a moral obligation” (Berry, 2018, p.5). Gutiérrez (2013) argues that mathematics and mathematics teaching is political, including the curriculum we choose, the activities we assign, and the education systems we organise. In line with Gutiérrez (2013), I also argue that school mathematics is political. It places people in socially valued mathematical rationalities and forms of knowing and consequently decides the idea of what mathematics is and how people might relate to it (or not). Mathematics becomes an important element of larger processes of selection of people that schooling operates in society (Valero, 2018). In addition, policies and reforms in mathematics education have been largely motivated by the desire to compete in a global economy, which also reinforces the privileged status of mathematics in society and promotes a labour market that would only benefit a select few. Tsai and Li (2017) note that “curriculum reforms have been one of the most common approaches adopted by policy makers when trying to promote change and improvement in school mathematics programs” (p.1264). This may thus lead to the situation in that the mathematics content that was taught, and the methods used to teach in schools were closely connected to standardised tests. Partly because of this, there would be little/no scope for teachers to introduce concepts/topics that are not examined in the standardised tests in school—for example, Schoenfeld and Kilpatrick (2013) argue that the likelihood of implementing inquiry-based curriculum in the US was small due to the considerations of preparing students for particular tests in the different states. In mathematics education, the concept of increasing equity within mathematics education is not new. As called by Gutstein et  al. (2005), “each of us has a responsibility to both think about and act on issues of equity” (p.98). Ernest (2021) also contends that ethics is widely perceived as irrelevant in mathematics. He examines the role and need for ethics in mathematical practice from some ethically sensitive areas and problematic categories with respect to mathematics and its applications, and then concludes that “we mathematicians have a vital role to play in keeping governments and corporations ethical and honest” (ibid, p.34). In recent years, the discourses in combating injustices and creating a just society have been working to move mathematics education research “from equity as choice to equity as an intentional collective professional responsibility” (Aguirre et al., 2017, p.128). Aguirre et al. (2017) identify four political acts that illustrate the essential role of equity as an explicit responsibility of mathematics education researchers. They are as follows: (1) enhance mathematics education research with an equity lens, (2) acquire the knowledge necessary to do genuine equity work, (3) challenge the false dichotomy between mathematics and equity, and (4) expand the view of what counts as “mathematics”. In ESD, it aims to draw attention to the purpose of the world’s education and moves the aim of education from simply a matter of training people for the global economy to engage citizens in and for society. As Khan (2014) suggests, “it [ESD] supports the acquisition of knowledge to understand our complex world; the development of interdisciplinary understanding, critical thinking and action skills to

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address these challenges with sustainable solutions” (p.11). Thus, ESD calls for an interdisciplinary approach and a reorienting of the existing disciplines and pedagogies to motivate people to “become proactive contributors to a more just, peaceful, tolerant, inclusive, secure and sustainable world” (UNESCO, 2014, p.15). Therefore, in the next section, I will look at research on interdisciplinary learning and STEM education in mathematics education, and then draw attention to the question of whether the existing philosophical views of mathematics can be applied to understand the role of mathematics in interdisciplinary learning.

17.5 Interdisciplinary Learning, STEM Education, and Mathematics Education In mathematics education, as Williams et al. (2016) note, interdisciplinary learning is “a relatively new field of research in mathematics education, but one that is becoming increasingly prominent internationally because of the political agenda around Science Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)” (p.1). Over the past few decades, studies have highlighted the benefits of interdisciplinary STEM learning for transferring what students learn, for improving problem-solving abilities, for developing STEM knowledge in more flexible and novel ways, and for promoting a better understanding of STEM ideas in real-life situations (e.g. Hobbs et al., 2019; Nakakoji & Wilson, 2018; Saavedra & Opfer, 2012; Williams et al., 2016). Saavedra and Opfer (2012) state: Students must apply the skills and knowledge they gain in one discipline to another and what they learn in school to other areas of their lives. A common theme is that ordinary instruction doesn’t prepare learners well to transfer what they learn, but explicit attention to the challenges of transfer can cultivate it. (p.10)

It is also worth mentioning that there is an increasing awareness of out-of-school, university-led programme value in enhancing student interest and understanding of STEM and its applications (Baran et al. 2019). Jensen and Sjaastad (2013) argue that secondary school students who had opportunities to attend out-of-school STEM programmes at local universities or further education colleges helped to increase their awareness of STEM careers and could picture themselves as scientists. To further illustrate the role that universities can play in promoting interdisciplinary STEM learning for secondary school students, in the following, I will describe some preliminary findings from a pilot study of my own STEM and Sustainability (STEMS) project for students (ages 15–18) in Scotland. In this STEMS project, the contents of all of the workshops were designed by me and colleagues at my university, in discussion with the workshop instructors before implementing each of the workshops. All the workshops were conducted on Saturdays at a university. Students volunteered to attend this project. There were no selection criteria in recruiting workshop participants, but priority was given to students from disadvantaged backgrounds. The results of the student pre- and

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post-project questionnaires indicated that there were statistically significant differences in students’ understanding of sustainability and in their attitudes towards STEM subjects after they attended the project, with a higher mean score in the post-­ project questionnaire. Table 17.2 shows the main themes and activities of the workshops. Examples of student feedback on each activity are also presented. Due to the scope of this chapter, I will not describe each of the workshop activities here, but it is worth discussing some students’ feedback on this workshop activity: “capture-mark-recapture discussion and card game”. The activity consisted of (1) discussing biodiversity and the future of species issues, (2) understanding the proportion concept for the capture-mark-recapture method, (3) considering statistical assumptions for the capture-mark-recapture method (e.g. why is the result Table 17.2  The main themes and activities of the workshops and student feedback Theme Theme 1 The volume of life on Earth – Biodiversity

Main activity Global goal string activity Capture-mark-recapture discussion and card game Carbon cycle game

Theme 2 A renewable, biodegradable fuel – Biodiesel

Bioenergy crossword game Controversial discussion:  Jatropha – a solution or a false hope? Using graphs to represent and interpret biodiesel production SDG 7 affordable and clean energy: why it matters? Benefits and drawbacks of offshore wind farms Wind turbines: how many blades experiment

Theme 3 A clean source of renewable energy – wind power

Theme 4 Mathematics and climate changes – what the mathematics is telling us

Climate changes art gallery How high school mathematics gives insights into climate changes Relay game: what students have learned from the workshops

Examples of student feedback “All goals are connected and everything impacts one another” “It was good to learn about sampling techniques and its practical use and its pros and cons depending on its use in different situations” “It was a fun and smart way to teach the carbon cycle” “I enjoyed crossword most as I was good as it” “A good debate. [it’s] interesting and encouraged me to think about the topic in detail “Recapped my knowledge of drawing graphs – I further developed my knowledge of Jatropha and biodiesel” “Clean energy is important as we need to think about the effects and impact on the world because of it” “Clean source of power, but it can ‘ruin’ landscapes and affect biodiversity” “It allowed me to problem solving and learn about the physics behind the wind power generation methods” “Recalled climate changes knowledge, but don’t like drawing” “I learnt more about mathematical concepts and know climate changing is happening at a faster rate than predicted” “Revisited past workshops to revise knowledge – team building games are fun”

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unlikely to be exactly true?), and (4) using the card game to help students know how to do the capture-mark-recapture method. Two examples of student feedback on the activity that were collected from their post-workshop interviews are presented as follows: I was surprised to know that it [the answer] is unlikely to be exactly true. I thought the maths would always give you the correct answer. The only real…real understanding I had of sustainability before was from a biology lesson years ago. This [Capture-Mark-Recapture discussion and card game] really helped me to understand it and also engage with it with some practical exercises and ideas which I found very interesting and enjoyable.

From the student feedback above, it shows that the practical exercises (e.g. card games) and interdisciplinary approaches had really helped them to understand sustainability, although they had been taught about it in their biology lesson before. The student feedback above also made a reference to “I thought that maths would always give you the correct answer”. While it is not surprising that students were not aware of the uncertainty of mathematics, the results of the student interviews suggested that, partly because little statistics was taught to them or statistical knowledge was something that was crammed into their heads in school mathematics, they did not understand the concept that underlies the operation when performing the capture-mark-recapture method, even those who were able successfully to perform the operation. It is also worth mentioning here that, while statistical data is presented in the news on a daily basis, error bars around the data points are rarely included on the grounds that most people would not understand their significance. Similarly, when a change in some quantity—be it a car accident or the COVID case rate—is reported, there is no accompanying statement as to whether the change is statistically significant on the grounds that most people would not understand the concept. It may therefore be difficult for people to come to appreciate that measurement without an associated uncertainty is often of little value. As I have mentioned earlier, in line with other researchers (e.g. Gutiérrez, 2013), school mathematics is political. Thus, in typical school mathematics, certain branches of mathematics are overrepresented (e.g. algebra) and others underrepresented (e.g. approximation, statistics, probability, discrete mathematics, and fractal mathematics). Take approximation and discrete mathematics as examples; when mathematics is applied to solve real-world problems, it invariably involves the use of approximation. In addition, discrete mathematics gives approximations for the size of some measurements. Students should come to understand that approximations produce inexact results and sometimes unreliable results. Arguably, discrete mathematics and approximation should be taught as a part of mathematics. Regarding statistical teaching in schools, Batanero et al. (2011) argue that “many teachers unconsciously share a variety of difficulties and misconceptions with their students with respect to fundamental statistical ideas” (p.409) because they do not actually teach much statistics and rarely use statistics to analyse data.

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This is cause for concern as, if students in their education were routinely taught some basic statistics, then news feeds would be enhanced and students would have the capacity to make informed, data-driven decisions—and, more importantly, they would develop a readiness to question the validity of data-based assertions unaccompanied by a statistical justification. There is little doubt that most topics in schools help to teach deductive and inductive reasoning. However, it is arguable that the typical school-based mathematics curriculum tends to view students’ learning from the narrow sense of the scores achieved, rather than from the standpoint of educational development such as transfer of learning. It is therefore not surprising that mathematics teaching has often been criticised for being teacher-centred, content-oriented, and academic-driven (e.g. Petocz & Reid, 2003) and students nowadays are highly dependent and passive and have difficulty in constructing meaning and understanding from their learning. Like school mathematics, I also argue that STEM education is political too. As Williams et al. (2016) describe, “in almost all countries now politicians see education in terms of preparation of a workforce for a competitive industrial sector, and STEM is seen as the route to more value-adding industries, especially in knowledge economies” (p.1). There is general agreement among the majority of the general public that the development of mathematical skills plays an essential role in helping the younger generations function effectively in today’s technological society and, hence, that the acquisition of mathematical skills contributes to economic growth and prosperity— for example, the deductive reasoning skills developed by solving mathematical equations are essential when it comes to writing and debugging computer programs. However, several mathematics researchers have raised concerns that this focus on using mathematics for problem-solving is too narrow (e.g. Berry, 2018; Ernest, 2020; Gellert, 2011, Gutstein, 2012, Martin, 2015, Skovsmose, 2019). Gellert (2011) contends that “thinking of mathematics only as a powerful tool for solving economic problems is a truncated conception of mathematics-in-society” (p.20). Swanson (2019) points out that “a common theme which emerges from the case studies is that of a potential for mathematics to disappear, or to become a mere tool, within such [STEM] activities” (p.157). The National Council of Supervisors of Mathematics (NCSM) and National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) in the US have also highlighted that although it is recognised that all the subjects within the STEM education are important, it is necessary to affirm “the essential role of a strong foundation in mathematics as the centre of any STEM education program” (NCSM & NCTM, 2018, p.1). A question arises as to whether the existing philosophical views of mathematics can be applied to understand the role of mathematics in interdisciplinary learning. This question remains unanswered. It is thus important for us to think about how mathematics interrelates with the other disciplines and contexts involved in the context of interdisciplinary learning. In particular, if ESD is to be integrated into mathematics education, we need a new philosophy to address questions as to what mathematics can help people gain insights into the role that mathematics plays in shaping human society and how mathematics can help people take up sustainable development challenges.

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17.6 A Call for Reconfiguring and Rethinking the Philosophy of Mathematics for the Twenty-First Century How sustainable is mathematics? It is still unclear—when it comes to classroom practice—what ESD in mathematics education should look like in the twenty-first century. As argued by Barwell (2018), “there has been little sustained mathematics education research” (p.156). My review of ESD-related studies has confirmed these findings: I found that the number of studies in ESD relating to mathematics in general, and to mathematics education in particular, is few and disproportionate to the number of studies that document problems with its implementation—problems for which solutions are needed urgently. Over the past few decades, while there has been substantial preparatory work when it comes to adapting ESD for disparate subjects and education systems (Laurie et al., 2016), there has been limited progress when it comes to embedding such work within school curricula (Hunt et al., 2011; Summers, 2013). Furthermore, research shows that the quantity and quality of ESD provision in teacher education have been “patchy” (Bamber et al., 2016). In the field of mathematics and mathematics education, it is widely accepted that pure mathematics is neutral and value-free; however, the situation becomes more nuanced once mathematics is applied to real-world scenarios. Ernest (2020) notes that “one of the traditional problems of the philosophy of mathematics is the question of how wholly abstract mathematics can have any effect on the world” (p.79). As discussed in previous sections, traditionally, mathematics was taught as a static body of knowledge and unquestionable truth. However, it has in the last century been questioned that there can be no complete provable body of mathematical knowledge, no unification of what is provable and what is true (e.g. Gödel’s incompleteness theorem). It is difficult to understand how the uncertainty of mathematics has surfaced in the philosophy of mathematics education. In Husserl’s later work, he claims that his idea of life-world can be used as a fundamental and novel phenomenon previously invisible to the sciences. Husserl insists: There is a specific and entirely new science of the life-world itself [..] that would, among other things, offer a new basis for grounding the natural and human sciences. There never has been such an investigation of the lifeworld as subsoil (Untergrund) for all forms of theoretical truth […] The life-world demands a different type of investigation that goes beyond the usual scientific treatment of the natural or human world. It must be descriptive of the life-world in its own terms, bracketing conceptions intruding from the natural and cultural sciences, and identifying the ‘types’ (Type) and ‘levels’ (Stufe) that belong to it (cited from Moran, 2012, p.223)

In line with Husserl’s idea of the life-world, I also argue that there is clearly a need to demand a different type of investigation that goes beyond the existing philosophies of mathematics and mathematics education so that it can align more closely with twenty-first--century learning priorities. In the previous section, I have shown that the interdisciplinary ESD approaches can assist the sustainable development movement by cultivating in students the

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skills needed in mathematics as well as across different subjects/disciplines to make informed judgments about sustainable development when faced with contradictory information, data, and opinions. I believe that the integration of ESD into mathematics education has the potential to make a significant contribution to the sustainable development movement. To this end, I argue that the philosophy of mathematics and mathematics education needs to be reconfigured and re-envisioned so as to accommodate social, economic, and environmental dimensions. Topics that would help students to acquire relevant knowledge, to practice critical thinking, to manage uncertainty, and to act in a measured and responsible manner when faced with a pending crisis should also be included in school mathematics, with the aim of better preparing students to address the global issues that they will face during their lifetimes.

17.7 Concluding Marks This chapter by no means claims to be a fully comprehensive study of how the philosophy of mathematics and mathematics education should be reconfigured or reenvisioned in order to appropriately integrate the relevant aspects of ESD into mathematics and mathematics education. However, its discussions may offer relevant information on rethinking the existing philosophies to respond to a growing demand to integrate ESD into mathematics teaching and learning. As I have discussed in previous sections—the “teaching to the test” culture in mathematics education, the dominant philosophy of pure mathematics and the issues in mathematics education regarding equity, social justice and interdisciplinary learning—all of which have shown that the incorporation of ESD, as defined by UNESCO, into mathematics education is far from simple. Arguably, if we are to meet the current sustainable development challenges, we must broaden the focus and find a new philosophy of mathematics to incorporate ESD into mathematics education. Over the past two decades, research has only started to address the fundamental questions facing the incorporation of ESD into mathematics teaching and learning. The work is still in progress, and there is certainly still much work to be done. This chapter may only be one amongst several attempts to achieve this goal. More research will, no doubt, contribute further to the understanding of this highly complex and demanding aspect of mathematics education and to the routine teaching of ESD within mathematics classrooms. Of course, more research is also needed to focus on the critical thinking and problem-solving skills involved in mathematical modelling and measurement, on how mathematics is applied within other disciplines, and on how mathematics provides a lingua franca that supports effective, ethical communication between disparate communities across the world.

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Russell, B. (1902). Letter to Frege. In J. van Heijenoort (Ed.), From Frege to Gödel (pp. 124–125). Harvard University Press, 1967. Saavedra, A. R., & Opfer, V. D. (2012). Learning 21st-century skills requires 21st-century teaching. Phi Delta Kappan, 94, 8–13. Schoenfeld, A., & Kilpatrick, J. (2013). A US perspective on the implementation of inquirybased learning in mathematics. ZDM-International Journal on Mathematics Education, 45(6), 901–909. Skovsmose, O. (2019). Crisis, critique and mathematics. Philosophy of Mathematics Education Journal, 35, 1–16. Smith, A. (2017). Report of Professor Sir Adrian Smith’s review of post-16 mathematics. Department for Education. Snapper, E. (1979). The three crises in mathematics: Logicism, intuitionism and formalism. Mathematics Magazine, 52(4), 207–216. Social Mobility Commission in the UK. (2018). State of the nation 2018–19: Social mobility in Great Britain: Summary. Social Mobility Commission. Summers, D. (2013). Education for sustainable development in initial teacher education: From compliance to commitment—Sowing the seeds of change. Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, 7(2), 205–222. Swanson, D. (2019). Introduction. In B.  Doig, J.  Williams, D.  Swanson, et  al. (Eds.), Interdisciplinary mathematics education. ICME-13 monographs (pp.  157–165). Springer International Publishing. Tsai, T. L., & Li, H. C. (2017). International comparative studies in mathematics education: Are we obsessed with the international rankings of measured educational outcomes? International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 48(8), 1262–1267. United Nations (UN). (1992). Agenda 21. Retrieved from http://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/ content/documents/Agenda21.pdf United Nations (UN). (2015). Transforming our world: The 2030 agenda for sustainable development. United Nations. Retrieved from https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/post2015/ transformingourworld/publication United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). (2012). Education for sustainable development: Building a better, fairer world for the 21st century. Retrieved from https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000216673 United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). (2014). Global citizenship education: Preparing learners for the challenges of the twenty- first century. Retrieved from http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0022/002277/227729e.pdf United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). (2018). Global action programme on education for sustainable development. Retrieved from https:// en.unesco.org/gap Valero, P. (2018). Political perspectives in mathematics education. In S. Lerman (Ed.), Encyclopedia of mathematics education (pp. 1–4). Springer International Publishing. Williams, J., Roth, W. M., Swanson, D., et al. (2016). Interdisciplinary mathematics education: State of the art. Springer International Publishing. Yaro, K., Amoah, E., & Wagner, D. (2020). Situated perspectives on creating mathematics tasks for peace and sustainability. Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 20(2), 218–229. Zakaria, E., & Iksan, Z. (2007). Promoting cooperative learning in science and mathematics education: A Malaysian perspective. Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 3, 35–39.

Part IV

Philosophy of Mathematics Education in Diverse Perspectives, Cultures, and Environments

Chapter 18

Asé O’u Toryba ‘Ara Îabi’õnduara! Antonio Miguel, Elizabeth Gomes Souza, and Carolina Tamayo Osorio

18.1 Introduction In this chapter, we carry out a therapeutic-grammatical investigation of the philosophical problem related to the belief in the supposed uniqueness and universality of Western logical-formal mathematics and the main philosophical arguments that support it, with the purpose of deconstructing it based on a decolonial counterargument. This counter-argument does not claim to constitute a new philosophy of mathematics that can support a new perspective of the philosophy of mathematics education, it does give visibility, in general terms, to a therapeutic-­decolonial way of educating and of educating oneself mathematically in school, through the nondisciplinary problematization of algorithmic cultural practices historically invented as adequate responses to normative social problems emerging in different forms of life. In this sense, such algorithmic-normative practices can be seen as mathematical language games,1 in Wittgenstein’s sense.  Wittgenstein (2017, § 7) coined the expression “language games” to refer to the totality of language and the activities intertwined with it, proposing to redirect the words from their metaphysical use to their everyday use. The expression language-game seeks to highlight, with the word “game,” the importance of language praxis, that is, it seeks to highlight language as a theatrical and performative practice, and, with this, the multiplicity of activities in which the language is inserted. Wittgenstein’s deconstructionist, nondogmatic, and non-essentialist therapeutic philosophizing 1

A. Miguel (*) State University of Campinas, Campinas, Brazil E. G. Souza University of Pará, Belém, Pará, Brazil C. Tamayo Osorio Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_18

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This decolonial counter-argument highlights the claim that such practices and the ways in which they affect different forms of life in the contemporary world should be the focus of therapeutic problematizations of a school mathematics education that intends to be decolonial. In line with Miguel and Tamayo (2020, p. 5), we are seeing and wanting to explore here a decolonial aspect in the therapeutic attitude, not only because this attitude is being practiced here by us to deconstruct discourses and practices that contemporary decolonial discourse sees as colonizers, but also because we are seeing its decolonizing aspect as the purpose that guides our way of practicing it.

Methodologically referenced by the works of the Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein, the therapeutic-grammatical investigation that we present here is characterized through a neither this/nor that, because it cannot be seen either as a philosophical investigation guided by a general and prescriptive scientific method – empirical-verificationist or theoretical-logical-fundamentalist – nor as proceeding in an irrational and anarchic way, since it does not allow itself to be guided either by a previously defined method, nor by a universal method that could be later described and detached to be applied in other problems. “There is not a single philosophical method, though there are indeed methods, different therapies, as it were” (Wittgenstein, 2009, § 133). Each therapeutic investigation – even when it uses sources or data directly collected in field research, which is not the case here – invents its own ethical-­aesthetic style of philosophizing and does not use such sources or data to attest or support a supposed final thesis on the investigated problem to be defended by the researchertherapist. In fact, the ethical-aesthetic style of Wittgenstein’s philosophizing makes the reader co-responsible for the developments generated by reading his work. It is Wittgenstein himself who expresses this desire, in the following way, in the preface to Philosophical Investigations: “I should not like my writing to spare other people the trouble of thinking. But if possible, to stimulate someone to thoughts of his own” (Wittgenstein, 2009, Preface, p. 4e). Another important point to be highlighted here is that a therapeutic-grammatical investigation of a philosophical problem has nothing to do with an investigation of a psychological nature, since it operates on the “grammars” – that is, on the set of

does not allow itself to be categorically defined even one of the key terms of his philosophizing, namely, the expression “language games.” However, instead of a categorical definition, Wittgenstein provides an ostensive definition, that is, numerous examples of language games, as in passage 23 of the Philosophical Investigations: “[…] The word “language-­game” is used here to emphasize the fact that the speaking of language is part of an activity, or of a form of life. Consider the variety of language-games in the following examples, and in others: Giving orders, and acting on them; Describing an object by its appearance, or by its measurements; Constructing an object from a description (a drawing); Reporting an event; Speculating about the event; Forming and testing a hypothesis; Presenting the results of an experiment in tables and diagrams; Making up a story; and reading one; Acting in a play; Singing rounds; Guessing riddles; Cracking a joke; telling one; Solving a problem in applied arithmetic; Translating from one language into another; Requesting; thanking; cursing; greeting; praying […].”

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guiding rules – of the different language games made public (the different “public philosophies,” in Paul Ernest’s sense) in the field of scientific-academic activities. It is therefore necessary to warn readers about the analogies that could be wrongly established between therapeutic-grammatical investigations and psychotherapies, whatever their theoretical affiliations, as well as between them and the maieutic Socratic method in the way it was didactically and cognitively practiced in Plato’s dialogues, guided by the purpose of “convincing” Socrates’ interlocutors – or rather, to impose them – about the essential and irrefutable truth of a certain point of view (thesis) related to the problem in focus. Even though the written presentation of our therapeutic investigation in the form of a dialogical-argumentative text can maintain “family resemblances” (Wittgenstein, 2009, § 67) with the philosophical-empirical-fallibilist investigation practiced in the dialogical-dialectical text of Proofs and Refutations by Imre Lakatos, there is a subtle and radical difference between both that needs to be highlighted here. The repeated application of the confident rational method of “prove and refute” triggered by Lakatos, guided by his paradoxical purpose of “proving” the skeptical thesis that a mathematical proof never proves what it purports to prove, is in manifest inverse contrast with our “confident conviction.” In a “methodologically skeptical” therapeutic investigation  – by refusing to define a method, whether rational or irrational, that can guide it – there is not exactly a thesis to be proved, defended, verified, or refuted, but only a problem to be better understood, clarified or, as the case may be, to be dissolved as a problem, through the decolonial counter-argument, case by case. The Wittgensteinian therapeutic-grammatical perspective begins from the conception that “philosophy must not interfere in any way with the actual use of language, so it can in the end only describe it. For it cannot justify it either. It leaves everything as it is” (Wittgenstein, 2017, § 124): Wittgenstein’s writing styles are aphoristic, non-conceptual, polyphonic, and questioning. This writing profile leads his different readers to different assertions, in a self-responsible process of understanding his writings. […] A style of philosophizing that deconstructs images, concepts, conceptions elaborated from a fixed, dogmatic, representational, and external spectrum to the practice or phenomenon studied. The aphoristic and dialogical way of conducting this deconstruction calls to look how the practices occur. “Don’t think, but look”. (Wittgenstein, 2017, § 66), see how the language works? (Souza et al., 2022, p. 278)

By extension, a therapeutic investigation is not driven by the dogmatic purpose of convincing readers of the reasonableness or truth of a point of view over the others that are manifested in the debate, nor is there a privileged interlocutor who had this kind of power. Finally, therapeutic research, such as the one we carry out here, does not claim for itself a status of empirical-verificationist or theoretical-logical-fundamentalist scientificity. This is because, on the one hand, we do not believe that the theoretical discourses produced in the field of philosophical investigation  – for example, philosophies of mathematics, philosophies of education, and philosophies of mathematics education  – are endowed with the pretentious imperialist power of grounding, to validate or rectify the effective ways of practicing mathematics and

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mathematics education in different fields of human activity, including the field of school education. On the other hand, we think that the greater or lesser social and political relevance, credibility, acceptability, effects, and affects of philosophical discourses reside in their performative powers to modify habits, customs, beliefs, ideologies, and behaviors, both on a personal and social-institutional level. Hence, the choice we made to present our philosophical investigation through a therapeutic-dialogical-problematizing writing endowed, in our view, with performative power in relation to standard conventional presentations, seen as “scientifically correct or acceptable” by the scientific-editorial field of the contemporary academic world. “Hence our choice for what is in front of our vision, without worrying about what is supposedly hidden. These voices always tell us – “Look! – Look!” (De Jesus, 2015, p. 52). We choose six persons will participate in this debate: Oiepé, Mokoi, Mosapyr, Irundyk, Mbó, and Opá kó mbó. Their names correspond, respectively, to the numerals one, two, three, four, five, and ten in the ancient Tupi language, today considered one of the two most important linguistic branches of the hundreds of different languages currently spoken by indigenous communities in Brazil. Other remote interlocutors are invited to participate in the debate, or they enter the room uninvited. They are identified by acronyms formed by the first letters of their names and surnames. Although several public and published points of view related to the problem we investigated have been presented, defended, or refuted by the different face-to-face or remote interlocutors participating in the debate, none of these points of view – among others, those of Hogben, Aleksandrov, Lakatos, Perminov, and Raju or even those of Wittgenstein himself – could be attributed to us as researcher-therapists or authors of this collective text, which does not mean that each of us, as individual researchers, did not make different decolonial choices to conduct our research, teaching and teacher formation activities. The purpose of a therapeutic-grammatical investigation is the rejection of every form of dogmatism. Therefore, this is not a text that dogmatically defends a formalist, fallibilist, ethnomathematics, decolonial or any other point of view in relation to the investigated problem, even though the indigenous interlocutors who discuss this problem are undoubtedly committed to an anthropophagic-decolonial critique regarding the belief in the uniqueness and universality of western logical-formal mathematics and the main philosophical arguments that support it. It does not, however, prevent them from disagreeing with each other, whether in relation to various aspects of this criticism or in relation to aspects of a possible therapeutic-decolonial proposal to educate and to educate oneself mathematically, at school, through the nondisciplinary problematization of normative cultural practices. In fact, in our therapeutic-dialogical-problematizing text, we try to take care as much as possible not to mischaracterize the principles that characterize a therapeutic-grammatical investigation.

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18.2 Therapeutic Debate Irundyk – I think there is a common belief that has guided Western school mathematics education, namely, to assume as true and, therefore, as potentially applicable only those propositions that have been logically-deductively proved. It is, therefore, the value and power attached to logical proof that imparts to the proposition the status of truth, so that such a belief produces its own picture of the truth of a proposition as always being relative to the deductive system to which it belongs, without coming into conflict with the others. Mbó – It’s true! It is this belief that has been the engine of the entire history of colonizing Western mathematics education… Mokoi – If the East is, in fact, an invention of the West, as argued by Said (2003), I think that such a belief could also be extended to the global school mathematics education, which is nothing but the axiomatized set of lies logico-deductively proved propositions that European colonizers told us about. This history, therefore, does not represent us, it only represents them. Mosapyr – For my part, I think that such a belief is neither Eastern nor Western, but only colonial. It should no longer be imposed on us by school mathematics education. After all, as Lakatosian fallibilism has said, a mathematical proof never proves. IL (Lakatos, 2015, p. 152) – It has not yet been sufficiently realised that present mathematical and scientific education is a hotbed of authoritarianism and is the worst enemy of independent and critical thought. While in mathematics this authoritarianism follows the deductivist pattern, in science it operates through the inductivist pattern. Oiepé – I agree! For Lakatos, a proof can always be refutable through the presentation of local counterexamples – that is, those that refute one or more of its passages – or global ones, that is, those that refute the proposition itself. And even if a proof can be rectified, it will be, ad infinitum, open to logical criticism and refutation. Opá kó mbó – Lakatos’ fallibilism is nothing but an extension of Popperian fallibilism as a philosophy of science into the domain of the philosophy of mathematics. It is curious to note, however, that if Popperian fallibilism is widespread in scientific communities, Lakatosian fallibilism has never even shaken the mathematical community’s confidence in the infallible performative power of a deductive proof. It seems, then, that no form of philosophical skepticism, even in the West, has merely unsettled the solidity of mathematics, usually considered universal, unique, and true. IL (Lakatos, 2015, p. 4–5) – For more than two thousand years there has been an argument between dogmatists and sceptics. The dogmatists hold that – by the power of our human intellect and/or senses – we can attain truth and know that we have attained it. The sceptics on the other hand either hold that we cannot attain the truth at all (unless with the help of mystical experience), or that we cannot know if we can attain it or that we have attained it. In this great debate, in which arguments are time and again brought up to date, mathematics has been the proud fortress of dogmatism.

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Whenever the mathematical dogmatism of the day got into a ‘crisis’, a new version once again provided genuine rigour and ultimate foundations, thereby restoring the image of authoritative, infallible, irrefutable mathematics, ‘the only Science that it has pleased God hitherto to bestow on mankind’. Mokoi – I think this happens because Lakatosian fallibilism is really a fragile skeptical philosophy, actually incapable to destabilize logic formal mathematics. VP (Perminov, 1988, pp. 500–508) – Reliability of mathematical proofs can be called in question on the basis of different arguments. […] The principal argument by Lakatos, which is at the same time a proper empiricist argument, consists in stating that a mathematical proof is never liberated from the meaningful context and, consequently, from implicit assumptions. But the presence of implicit assumptions within the proof may result in its refutation by counterexamples of local or global nature. […] This argument is by all means true. But the principal problem is whether we can completely get rid of such implicit assumptions giving rise to counterexamples without total formalization of theory. Lakatos’ response is definitely negative. We feel that he answers the question this way because he identifies all types of intuition with empirical intuition, and for this reason any meaningfulness is to him dangerous and undermines the validity of reasoning. In this case, any proof is not fully justified and any attempt to make it such leads to regression to infinity. Actually, the meaningfulness in mathematics differs essentially from that in natural sciences. At a certain level of evolution, mathematical proof is purified of all assumptions except those apodictically reliable ones. But this kind of meaningfulness cannot give rise to counterexamples. […] Another argument by Lakatos against the rigor of proof, which may be called methodological, procceds from the distinction between rigor of the proof and that of the proof analysis. Lakatos was convinced that by increasing the rigor of the proof analysis we always call in question what had been previously accepted as indubitable, we narrow down the ultimate justification layer and therefore reduce to the level of the unrigorous what had earlier seemed rigorous and final. […] But the possibility of conceptualizing the intuitive does not mean that we can correct or reject its content. Carrying out the logical analysis of arithmetic we do not reject the praxiologically accepted elementary truths. […] In mathematics there exists the area of ultimately valid, the area of apodictic truths that cannot be limited or corrected by logical analysis. […] Logical formalization of the theory is adequate only when it does not distort its present content. […] Lakatos’ idea of the relative character of the justification layer […] proceeds from the erroneous concept of the intuitive as unavoidably invalid and subject to logical corrections. The ultimate justification layer in mathematics is only related to categorical and praxeological intuition and in the long run to fundamental categorical distinctions; it cannot be changed by means of external (logical or epistemological) criticism and in a sense remains unchanged through the entire history of mathematics. […] In his criticism of the infallibility of mathematics Lakatos resorts to another argument, namely, to the fact of historical changeability of the criteria of rigor. If the latter evolve, then the assertion of the ultimate rigor of a proof seems to lose sense. This argument is […] based on the false premise that takes for granted that new criteria of rigor are able to eliminate mathematical results

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obtained before their acceptance. But this is not supported by the history of mathematics. This reasoning does not take into account in a due way the logical criteria are secondary as compared to the contents of mathematics and that they are introduced only under the condition of preserving the content achieved that is ultimately based on the praxeological and categorical concepts. Mbó – I am inclined to disagree with Perminov’s critique. It is based on the postulation of the so-called “apodictic” or “irrefutable” truths – such as “logical intuitions” and “praxeological intuitions”. These would compose an alleged “last instance of justification” of the proof. Opá kó mbó – I think it would be necessary to clarify what Perminov would be understanding by “logical” and “praxeological” intuitions, claimed to be unrectifiable, as opposed to “empirical” and “conceptual intuitions”, open to criticism and logical analysis and correction. Mbó – I’ll try to explain. For Perminov, “intuition” is any plausible reasoning or inference that can be true or false. They are based on implicit assumptions, sometimes legitimate and sometimes illegitimate, that are always amenable to rectification. In such cases, we should make them explicit, so that illegitimate implicit assumptions on which they are eventually based may come to light and be corrected. Oiepé  – Could you give us examples of intuitive inference amenable to rectifications? Mbó – Empirical intuitive inferences, which are based on implicit assumptions associated with empirical inductive generalizations, are rectifiable. The Hungarian mathematician Farkas Bolyai proved, in 1832, that every polygon can be decomposed into polygonal parts that, arranged in a certain way, reproduce another polygon that occupies the same area as the first. Based on empirical-inductive reasoning, we could think that we could extend this theorem from two-dimensional space to three-­ dimensional space, assuming that it would also remain valid for polyhedra. But this turns out to be false, as the German mathematician Max Dehn has proved. The so-called “conceptual” intuitions are also rectifiable, that is, those that resort to methods of direct visualization of non-obvious propositions already proven within a logical-axiomatic theory, to assess their plausibility. An example would be the construction of Euclidean models by Henri Poincaré and Félix Klein to visualize non-obvious propositions of Lobachevsky’s geometry. Such models are only accepted if they are compatible with the assumptions and propositions of the other system they represent. Oiepé – And what would be the apodictic or unrectifiable intuitive inferences? Mbó – These are the so-called “logical”, “categorical” and “praxeological” intuitive inferences. The “logics” are those that are based on assumptions that make it possible to logically reconcile two or more facts that are not necessarily compatible. They decree, so to speak, compatibility. This is the case, for example, of propositions such as: “the product of two negative numbers is a positive number”; “the square root of 2 is equal to two raised to the fractional exponent ½”. These propositions are inferences “decreed true” so that they do not contradict other praxiologically accepted arithmetical propositions, such as the commutative and associative

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properties of addition and multiplication of natural numbers and the distributive property of multiplication in relation to the addition and subtraction of natural numbers. On the other hand, the “categorical” intuitions, which are also unrectifiable, are those that express the desire shared by the community of mathematicians to preserve, in their proofs, the “empirical- perceptual obviousness” of certain evidence referring to spatial relationships between figures accessible to vision, such as, for example: “two distinct straight lines intersect at most at one point”. Mokoi  – But in Riemannian geometry, two straight lines always intersect at two points. Mbó – That’s right… But for categorical intuitions to be preserved, mathematicians invent Euclidean geometric models or resort to existing models – a spherical surface, for example – in which non-obvious propositions of non-Euclidean geometries can be visualized in a Euclidean way. Oiepé – Another example of a categorical intuitive proposition is that present in the proof of Proposition 1, from Book 1 of The Elements. To construct the equilateral triangle, Euclid implicitly assumes, based on an “empirical-perceptual obviousness”, that the two circles with centers at each end of the side of the triangle should intersect. When Hilbert set out to rectify the logical flaws in the proofs provided by Euclid, he had to make this legitimate categorical intuitive assumption explicit, elevating it to the status of an axiom of his formalized Euclidean geometry. Opá kó mbó – The conclusion I am reaching is that “ultimately”, all these intuitions referred to by Perminov could be reduced to praxeological intuitions, the only ones about which we have not yet been clarified. And if this “intuition” of mine is correct, then why, for him, would only some of them be unrectifiable and not all of them? And, if they are all, where would the need to logically prove what has already passed through the sieve of the praxeologically irrefutable come from? Irundyk – I think your questioning touches on the “Achilles’ heel” of formalist mathematicians, logicists, intuitionists, conventionalists, etc. Or rather, it touches on “Hilbert’s heel”, or Cauchy’s, or Dedekind’s, or Whitehead’s, or Russell’s, … And let’s stop right here, because this list is going forever, it tends to infinity. It is going to Cantor’s paradise, from where all of them are supposed to have left and to where all of them would like to return to dwell for all eternity. Mbó – That’s right… What Perminov calls “intuitive praxeological propositions” are precisely the guiding rules of the ways of informally practicing mathematics by different peoples and civilizations throughout history. What we would call, for example, cultural practices and which he, referring to Kant, prefers to call “intuitions”. But if, as Opá kó mbó said, they are all reducible to praxeological intuitions, either they would all be open to logical and epistemological analysis and rectification, or none would be. IL (Lakatos, 2015, p. 5, our italics) – Our modest aim is to elaborate the point that informal, quasi-empirical mathematics does not grow through a monotonous increase of the number of indubitably established theorems but through the incessant improvement of guesses by speculation and criticism, by the logic of proofs and refutations. Since, however, metamathematics is a paradigm of informal,

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quasi-­empirical mathematics just now in rapid growth, the essay, by implication, will also challenge modern mathematical dogmatism. YP (Perminov, 1988, pp.  500–508, our italics)  – Nobody seems to defend the possibility of such a revision [of the praxiologically accepted mathematical contents or propositions that formalism formalizes] and nevertheless, in general philosophical speculations concerning mathematics we are quite willing to agree that “nothing is absolute” and, therefore, assume the principal possibility of this revision. Such a divergence between the practical attitude and the general philosophical outlook in contemporary mathematics is accounted for by a number of circumstances and in the first place by the non-critical transfer of the generally scientific methodological propositions into the sphere of mathematics. Mathematical theory, in contrast to empirical science, represents a specific artificial world with strictly defined elements and a finite number of their properties. Within this artificial world we can establish final relations subject to verifying by means of finite procedures. […] Thus, we have all grounds to assert that the overwhelming part of mathematical results at work are actually ultimately justified in the sense that their proofs are fully guaranteed against refutation in the future, and this is true not only of specially verified formalized mathematics but also of common meaningful mathematics whose proofs are acknowledged to be sufficiently convincing. Oiepé – I think that Perminov just echoes the formalist belief in the relevance of theory and the conception of truth as consistency within a deductive system. In such a world, a proposition can only be true if it is logically proved, after its due conceptualization and insertion into a formal deductive system. Therefore, in the so- called “scientific” mathematics, there can be no absolute truth of any isolated proposition, because the truth of a proposition is always relative to the truths of other propositions postulationally accepted as true, as well as relative to the rules of inference prevailing in formal classical logic, the only ones accepted as true. Perminov and the formal mathematicians think that they can escape the criticisms of the Lakatosian fallibilists through the procedure of total formalization of mathematical theories called “naive” or “intuitive”. Thus, according to them, only adequate formalization of geometry (as, for example, Hilbert’s), or Arithmetic (as, for example, Peano’s or Russell-Whitehead’s) could demonstrate unequivocally and infallibly the truths of geometric or arithmetic propositions. Irundyk  – Let me conclude that the criticism that Perminov refers to the Lakatosian fallibilism’s desire for logical revision of mathematical propositions also applies to the logical desire expressed by Perminov, that it would be the existence and rigor of logical proof that would ensure the truth of such propositions and the trust we place in them. Mosapyr – Totally agree! Even if Perminov defends that philosophical discourse does not have the performative power to modify the effective ways of practicing mathematics in the different fields of human activity, even if he does not explicitly claim any philosophical perspective guiding his criticism. I think that all philosophical perspectives that see practices as the last instance of justification of mathematical knowledge  – and, among them, above all, the historical-dialectical materialist perspectives  – paradoxically tend to consider ‘mathematics’ only the

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justificationist narratives or meta-narratives – rhetorical or formal-symbolic – about these practices. Everything happens as if cultural practices could only acquire a status of scientificity after having been enclosed by such narratives or metanarratives. LH (Hogben, 1971, p. 3) – If we mean by science the written record of man’s understanding of nature, its story begins five thousand years ago. Western science is thus a fabric to which threads of many colours have contributed before Britain, North America and Northern Europe were literate. Egypt and Mesopotamia, the Phoenician colonies and the Greek-speaking world of Mediterranean antiquity, the civilizations of China, India and the Moslem world supplied warp and woof in turn before Christendom began to make its own contribution. LH (Hogben, 1973, Forward) – The first volume in this series, Beginnings and Blunders, traced the story of the skills our ancestors acquired, and the skills they left in their wake, before science began. This book starts with the need for a calendar to regulate the seasonal order of seed-sowing and flock-tending. For the construction of such a calendar men of the New Stone Age doubtless drew on the knowledge gained throughout many millennia from the scanning of the night skies by men who were still nomads and from the observation of the sun’s seasonal changes when village life began. The art of keeping a written record of the lapse of time took shape about 5000 years ago and was the achievement of the priestly guardians of the calendar in the temple sites of Egypt and Iraq. An incidental, but not itself useful, by-product of this phase of infant science was the art offorecasting correctly the occurrence of eclipses. Mosapyr  – Note that, although Hogben recognizes the performance of astronomical practices by still nomadic human beings, he does not see such practices as scientific, given that he would only tend to attribute such a status to them when they acquire a linguistic or symbolic character. Irundyk – I think that this way of legitimizing a practice as scientific is typically colonizing, because it ends up, by extension, exclusively empowering the different linguistic communities specialized in producing disciplinary narratives and metanarratives about practices that are effectively carried out in different fields of human activity. Mosapyr – Furthermore, the way in which Hogben sees and characterizes science as a discourse aimed at understanding “nature”, complements and explains the misunderstandings and ideological strategies triggered by the colonizing discourses of science and mathematics to empower themselves and differentiate themselves from other types of cultural practices. Irundyk – Your clarification suggests that this way of characterizing science, at the same time that it institutes and produces an abstract, unitary and universal image of “nature”, also comes to see it as an intelligible systemic totality, internally structured and teleologically preorganized phenomena that could be explained by different linguistic communities that turned to investigate and decipher this supposed universal modus operandis of nature. If, in the domain of the natural sciences, since Newton’s Principia, the different scientific theories – these great and pretentious metanarratives of the modus operandis of nature – have taken up and continued the cosmogonies of the pre-Socratic Greek philosophers, in the domain of mathematics,

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this means that since Russell and Whitehead’s Principia, the supposedly universal mathematical metanarrative of pure mathematicians or contemporary theorists does nothing more than to continue the Pythagorean-Platonic “cosmotheogony”.2 Mosapyr – I tend to conclude that if Hogben, Lakatos and Perminov, in different ways, try to remove a supposed universal mathematics from its logical-formal cage to see it imbricated in human practices and activities, this is only to re-imprison it in rhetorical or symbolic-formal (meta)narratives cages. Irundyk – I think, however, that none of these narratives, even when they wish to, are capable of radically breaking with the alleged universality and uniqueness of the axiomatic-formal metanarrative of Western mathematics. Mosapyr  – In addition to these colonizing critiques of the equally colonizing philosophy of mathematical fallibilism that we are discussing here, I think that Lakatos – and even less so Perminov – do not recognize the existence of mathematics other than Western logico-formal mathematics, but only defending the invariant method of proofs and disproofs to explain the way mathematics is invented and developed. Thus, even if Lakatos was indeed intent on challenging mathematical formalism, he paradoxically does nothing more than to recognize it as the unique and exclusive logic of the discovery and development of “informal and quasi-­ empirical mathematics”, since, for him, unlike the absolute power of mere internalist criticism, other external factors  – economic, technological, political, ideological, religious, legal, environmental, warlike, ethical, aesthetic, class struggles, etc.  – would not play any relevant role in this development. RCK (Raju, 2011a, p. 274–279, our italics) – Does formalism, then, provide a universal metaphysics? Now, it is an elementary matter of commonsense that metaphysics can never be universal. However, the case of 2 + 2 = 4 is often naively cited as “proof” of the universality of mathematics. This is naïve because the practical notion of 2 which derives as an abstraction from the empirical observation of 2 dogs, 2 stones etc. has nothing whatsoever to do with formal mathematics. […] The circuits on a computer chip routinely implement an arithmetic in which 1 + 1 = 0 (exclusive disjunction), or 1 + 1 = 1 (inclusive disjunction). Thus, formally, it is necessary to specify that the symbols 2, +, and 4 relate to Peano’s postulates. Trying to specify this brings in the metaphysics of infinity—a real computer (with finite memory, not a Turing machine) can never implement Peano arithmetic, because the notion of a natural number cannot be finitely specified. Thus, formalism does not provide a universal metaphysics. However, the philosophy of mathematics as metaphysics, combined with the myth of mathematics as universal truth, helped to promote a particular brand of metaphysics as universal. This is problematic

 In this passage, Irundyk is using the word “cosmotheogony” to refer to any metaphysical narrative that, analogously to the Pythagorean and Platonic cosmogonies, explains and justifies the emergence, organization and functioning of nature – or, in this case, the functioning and justification of linguistic-symbolic systems of a logical-deductive character – based on diffuse forces and supernatural divine entities, or else, on linguistic-argumentative concepts that are supposed to be nonfactual, immaterial and timeless. 2

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because while formal mathematics is no longer explicitly religious, like mathesis,3 its metaphysics remains religiously biased. On post-Crusade Christian rational theology, it was thought that God is bound by logic (cannot create an illogical world) but is free to create empirical facts of his choice. Hence, Western theologians came to believe that logic (which binds God) is “stronger” than empirical facts (which do not bind God). […] The metaphysics of formal math is aligned to post-­ Crusade Western theology which regarded metaphysics as more reliable than physics. In sharp contrast, all Indian systems of philosophy, without any exception, accept the empirical (pratyaksa) as the first means of proof (pramana) while the “Lokayata” reject inference/deduction as unreliable. So, Indian philosophy considered empirical proof as more reliable than logical inference. Thus, the contrary idea of metaphysical proof as “stronger” than empirical proof would lead at one stroke to the rejection of all Indian systems of philosophy. This illustrates how the metaphysics of formal math is not universal but is biased against other systems of philosophy. Now, deductive inference is based on logic, but which logic? Deductive proof lacks certainty unless we can answer this question with certainty. Russell thought, like Kant, that logic is unique and comes from Aristotle. However, one could take instead Buddhist or Jain logic, or quantum logic, or the logic of natural language, none of which is 2-valued. The theorems that can be inferred from a given set of postulates will naturally vary with the logic used: for example, all proofs by contradiction would fail with Buddhist logic. One would no longer be able to prove the existence of a Lebesgue non-measurable set, for example. This conclusively establishes that the metaphysics of formal math is religiously biased, for the theorems of formal mathematics vary with religious beliefs. Furthermore, the metaphysics of formal math has no other basis apart from Western culture: it can hardly be supported on the empirical grounds it rejects as inferior! The religious bias also applies to the postulates. In principle, a formal theory could begin with any postulates. However, in practice, those postulates are decided by authoritative mathematicians in the West, as in Hilbert’s synthetic geometry. The calculus, as taught to millions of school students today, is based on the notion of limits and the continuum. As noted by Naquib al-Attas, the idea of an infinitely divisible continuum is contrary to the beliefs of Islamic thinkers like al-Ghazali and al-Ashari who believed in atomism. (In fact, the calculus originated in India with similar atomistic beliefs: that the subdivisions of a circle must stop when they reach atomic proportions.) This does not affect any practical application: all practical application

 According to Raju, “mathematics” is an originally Greek word that was invented by the early Pythagoreans to mean a “techne of mathesis,” that is, a “technique of learning.” It was later used by the Platonic Socrates, in the famous dialogue “Menon,” to name and characterize his maieutic method of learning, which consisted in making the student recall knowledge that he had supposedly learned in previous lives, through a skillful rhetorical-verbal argumentation by his teacher-­ interlocutor. As we can see, the maieutic method was based on the Platonic theory of reminiscence, which believed in the idea of the reincarnation of the soul from the movement of renewal of the cosmos. 3

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of calculus today can be done using computers which use floating point numbers which are “atomistic”, being finite. Neglecting small numbers is not necessarily erroneous, since it is not very different from neglecting infinitesimals in a non-Archimedean field, and can be similarly formalised, since the (formal) notion of infinitesimal is not God-given but is a matter of definition; but students are never told this. They are told that any real calculation done on a computer is forever erroneous, and the only right way to do arithmetic is by using the metaphysics of infinity built into Peano’s postulates or the postulates of set theory. Likewise, they are taught that the only right way to do calculus is to use limits. Thus, school students get indoctrinated with the Western theological biases about infinity built into the notions of formal real numbers and limits, which notions are of nil practical value for science and engineering which require real calculation. In contrast to this close linkage of mathematics to theology in the West, most school math (arithmetic, algebra, trigonometry, calculus) actually originated in the non-West for practical purposes. From “Arabic numerals” (arithmetic algorithms) to trigonometry and calculus, this math was imported by the West for the practical advantages it offered (to commerce, astronomy, and navigation). This practically-oriented non-Western mathematics (actually ganita, or hisab), had nothing to do with religious beliefs such as mathesis. However, because of its different epistemology it posed difficulties for the theologically-laced notion of mathematics in the West. For example, from the sulba sutra to Aryabhata to the Yuktibhasa, Indian mathematics freely used empirical means of proof. Obviously, an empirical proof will not in any way diminish the practical value of mathematics. However, trying to force-fit this practical, non-Western math into Western religiously-­biased ideas about math as metaphysical made the simplest math enormously complicated. JF (Ferreirós, 2009, p. 380–381) – Raju thus proposes to deviate from classical logic, taking into account the empirical, in search of ‘the logic of the empirical world’. Although we cannot enter into the question in any detail, let me sketch an argument that Raju does not seem to consider. As usually understood, logic is not concerned with the world, but with assertions about the world — or more generally, with representations of phenomena. Logic is not a reflection on ontological matters, but on language and representations. And when it comes to representing, it seems most natural to consider just two options: a representation can be either adequate (to some degree of accuracy) or inadequate, tertium exclusum. This way of grounding bivalent logic, by the way, has little to do with culturally charged conceptions of God or religion or the mind. (That, however, is not to say that there have been no historical connections between Western mathematics and religion; but in my view the topic should be pursued along a line different from Raju’s insistence on the alleged theological basis of Western notions of logic and proof). The author asserts that abolishing the separation between mathematics and empirical science ‘is fatal to the present-day (Western) notion of mathematics’. This suggests that he is not well acquainted with relevant philosophical literature, such as Quine or Putnam, or relevant historical figures like Riemann, Poincare, Weyl, or even Hilbert. The assertion is linked with his insistence throughout on considering formalism and a

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formal notion of proof as the quintessence of modern mathematics, but this view, perhaps natural in a computer scientist, is highly dubious and ignores too many other aspects of the discipline. […] On the basis of his twofold criticism of the ideal of proof (based on its theological underpinnings and its reliance on bivalent logic), Raju concludes that mathematics is best conceived as calculation, not proof. […] Since in Raju’s view the choice of logic must depend on empirical considerations, and logic in turn determines inference and proof, he finds reason to believe that the Western separation of proof from the empirical is fundamentally wrong. Hence his preference for the traditional Indian notion of pramana, and also his insistence throughout this work that ‘deduction will forever remain more fallible than induction’. In this reviewer’s opinion, the argument remains far from convincing. Opá kó mbó – I think that José Ferreirós’ criticism of C. K. Raju does not hold up. When Raju proposes to deviate from classical binary logic, taking into account the empirical, in search of the “logic of the empirical world”, so as not to separate mathematics from the empirical sciences, and JF opposes him with the argument that bivalent classical logic – and therefore the logic of the essentialist principles of identity, tertium exclusum and non-contradiction – is not concerned with the world, but with statements about the world – that is, with language, representations and propositions – he does nothing more than commit himself to a representationalist picture of language and a linguistic picture of logic, pictures that Wittgenstein himself, already in the Tractatus, was willing to abandon and which, in fact, he abandoned in his later works. Mosapyr – I tend to agree with you, but I think that in speaking of “logic of the empirical world”, Raju seems to approach Lakatos’ thesis of the existence of a guiding logic for the informal practice of mathematics. As far as Lakatos is concerned, it is neither a deductivist nor an inductivist logic, but rather a fallibilist logic of proofs and refutations which is triggered to deconstruct confidence in the deductive proof. Raju also discredits both deduction and induction, although deduction, especially one based on binary logic, seems to him more fallible than induction. He even presents a potent argument that shows us where and why classical binary logic fails: “It is a well known principle of two-valued logic (which is used in the current method of mathematical proof) that any desired conclusion, whatsoever, may be derived from contradictory assumptions, which is why theologians use them so often” (Raju, 2021, p. 18). Mokoi – To me, Raju is saying that if the first proposition of the truth table of the conditional operator of classical logic is a contradiction, that is, p ∧ (¬p), whatever the truth value (V or F) of the second proposition is, the conditional will always be true. This means that if you start from a contradiction in your premises, you will be able to conclude anything. See, then, what he means by this is that you can logically prove any fake news!!! And that you can use classical logic not only as a (theo)logic, but also as a (ideo)logic! Mosapyr  – With this, I understand that Raju’s decolonial critique of Western mathematics goes beyond a properly logical or socio-anthropological-cultural critique. And even though this political-decolonial critique is made for defending mathematical multiculturalism, Raju, unlike ethnomathematicians, does not see the

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practice of Western mathematics as another ethnomathematics, among others. I tend to agree with him on this point, because the axiomatic-formal metanarrative of Western mathematics can never support the different ways in which mathematics is actually invented and practiced in different fields of human activity. Mokoi – This means that it would no longer be necessary to strive for any other logic to support these different effective ways of inventing and practicing mathematics. In my view, there is not even “a logic of the empirical world” and, even less, different logics that support different mathematical practices, because a mathematical practice does not need and cannot be founded. Thus, if on the one hand, Perminov and Ferreirós believe that a logical-deductive proof in fact proves a proposition that one wishes to prove, Lakatos and Raju believe that the proof proves nothing. For Lakatos logical proof does not prove because it is always open to criticism or refutation by counterexamples, whereas for Raju logical proof does not prove because any proposition one wishes to prove can be inferred from contradictory assumptions. LW (Wittgenstein apud Waismann, 1979, p. 33) – In mathematics there are not, first, propositions that have sense by themselves and, second, a method to determine the truth or falsity of propositions; there is only a method, and what is called a proposition is only an abbreviated name for the method. Mosapyr – In fact, Pythagoras’ proposition, for example, is nothing more than an algorithm, a technique, an “abbreviated method” to calculate the area of a square built on the hypotenuse of a right triangle as a function of the areas of the squares built on the legs. And if, as Wittgenstein says, the proposition is just an abbreviation of a method, that is, of a way of doing something, then there can be no difference between the method and an alleged “proof” of the method’s effectiveness. Therefore, the alleged “proof” does not prove, because a mathematical proposition is simply an algorithm, a way of doing something that does not need to be proved or justified. Opá kó mbó – I agree with you that there is no “logic of the empirical world” nor different logics that underlie different mathematical practices. But I disagree when you say that a mathematical proposition does not need to be grounded because it is a cultural practice, a method, a way of doing it. I think that such a practice does not need to be logically grounded; however, it needs to be somehow validated to have been seen and elected as a “good practice”, that is, in Raju’s terms, as a “practice that works”. Raju talks about “empirical proofs” of validating a mathematical practice, and I wonder what he means by that. AA (Aleksandrov et al., 1999, p. 61–62) – The concepts of arithmetic correspond to the quantitative relations of collections of objects. These concepts arose by way of abstraction, as a result of the analysis and generalization of an immense amount of practical experience. […] The conclusions of arithmetic are so convincing and unalterable, because they reflect experience accumulated in the course of unimaginably many generations and have in this way fixed themselves firmly in the mind of man and in language. Mosapyr – If, for Raju, “empirical proof” means the same as “empirical-inductive proof” – since he seems to believe that ordinary induction based on generalized empirical abstractions of facts validated by reiterated experience is less fallible than

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non-factual logical deduction  – I think that he would not only be dissolving differences between mathematics and natural sciences, but also committing himself to an untenable and repeatedly questioned empirical-inductivist philosophy of science or, at best, to a Popperian empirical-fallibilist philosophy. This would expose him, therefore, to all the criticisms that these philosophies have received throughout history, notably the one to which Frege (1960) submitted the inductivist empiricism with which John Stuart Mill (2009) tried to “found” arithmetic. LW (Wittgenstein apud Waismann, 1979, p. 33) – Most people think that complete induction is merely a way of reaching a certain proposition; that the method of induction is supplemented by a particular inference saying, therefore, that this proposition applies to all numbers. Here I ask the question, What about this ‘therefore’? There is no ‘therefore’ here! Complete induction is the proposition to be proved, it is the whole thing, not just the path taken by the proof. This method is not a vehicle for getting anywhere. Mosapyr – On the other hand, it may be that by “empirical proof” Raju means “visual proofs” or static “perceptual proofs” or, more broadly, dynamic “mechanical proofs”, analogous to those that peoples of antiquity produced to record graphically (in clay tablets; on the walls of temples and tombs; in leather, fabric, or papyrus; etc.), certain practices, techniques, or algorithms that have been repeatedly successful in different fields of human activity (agriculture, astronomy, navigation, construction, commerce, etc.). Such types of proofs, which I prefer to call “praxeological proofs”, came, over time, to be verbally described through oral or written alphabetic languages and to receive additional support from local logical-­ rhetorical-­ verbal arguments, that is, without that they were embedded in any axiomatic-deductive system (proofs of Heron of Alexandria, Pappus of Alexandria, etc.) that logically connected them with each other. Opá kó mbó – If this is the case, then I would tend to give credit to Raju, but on condition that a methodological-statutory difference is made between “empiricalinductive proof” and “praxeological proof”. And when I speak of “praxeological proofs” it is to distinguish them from either “empirical-inductive proofs” or “probabilistic proofs” defended by historical-dialectical materialist philosophies committed to classical or asymptotic conceptions of truth – seen, respectively, as a reliable reflection or as an asymptotic approximation of empirical-natural or social facts through verbal language  – either of “conventionalist proofs” committed to conceptions of truth as a consensus of expert communities, or even of “pragmatic proofs” committed to the conception of truth as accommodation of empirical-­ natural or social facts to human or socio-community purposes. The problem I see, for example, with Richard Rorty’s postmodern pragmatism is that it continues to speak with the voice of the European imperialist colonizer who, arrogantly distinguishing and distancing himself from the natural beings and forms of life that we, human beings, constitute with them, presupposes being able to continue wishing to arbitrarily and unilaterally impose on them as many “true” discourses as there are human purposes. Thus, if Rorty no longer sees language as a “mirror of nature” (Rorty, 1981), he continues to see nature as an unproblematic multiplicity of mirrors of language: RR – (Rorty, 1998, our italics) – For us pragmatists, there can and must

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be thousands of ways to describe things and people – as many purposes as we have relating to things and people. But this plurality is not problematic, it does not raise philosophical problems, nor does it fragment knowledge. […] Reality is one, but descriptions of it are countless […], because human beings have and must have different goals. Mosapyr – So, I speak of “praxeological proofs” to refer to cultural practices that reveal themselves as capable of providing satisfactory or adequate technologic solutions to problems that arise in different fields of human activity. I think that such proofs do not submit cultural practices to any regimes of truth, not because we could impose  – supposedly à la Rorty  – our purposes and desires on the natural and technological beings that participate in them, allowing or preventing the contemplation of our desires and purposes, but because I see such proofs as the last instances of justification of themselves and, therefore, not needing and not being able to be grounded. If a cultural practice has been invented and repeatedly practiced, it is because it is already an adequate response to a given difficulty and, for that reason, it functions as an unequivocal know-how, as a technique or algorithm, as a norm that, if followed strictly speaking, it must lead to the intended purpose. In this sense, any attempt to ground – logically, philosophically – a practice, or to suppose it fallible and rectifiable, shown itself as meaningless. LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-217, our italics) – “How am I able to follow a rule?” If this is not a question about causes, then it is about the justification for my acting in this way in complying with the rule. Once I have exhausted the justifications, I have reached bedrock, and my spade is turned. Then I am inclined to say: “This is simply what I do”. (Remember that we sometimes demand explanations for the sake not of their content, but of their form. Our requirement is an architectural one; the explanation a kind of sham corbel that supports nothing). Mosapyr – There is no single “logic of the empirical world”, no single “dialectic of nature”. Nor there is a “logic of praxis”, as if human praxis were one and there was a single logic that guides the relationships between human beings and other natural and technological beings. We could, if we wished, speak of logics of practices, to clarify that each cultural practice is guided by rules of an idiosyncratic praxeological logic. But where would such rules come from, if not from agreements among forms of life manifested in the dialectical interactions between humans and other natural beings involved in the language games that constitute such practices, so that the purposes of each game are achieved? A praxeological logic is not a linguistic-propositional logic, but a logic of “this is how I act”, of “this is how I should act”, if I want to achieve such purpose. LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-130, our italics) – Our clear and simple language-games are not preliminary studies for a future regimentation of language as it were, first approximations, ignoring friction and air resistance. Rather, the language games stand there as objects of comparison which, through similarities and dissimilarities, are meant to throw light on features of our language. LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-131, our italics) – For we can avoid unfairness or vacuity in our assertions only by presenting the model as what it is, as an object of

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comparison as a sort of yardstick; not as a preconception to which reality must correspond. (The dogmatism into which we fall so easily in doing philosophy). LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-107, our italics)  – We have got on to slippery ice where there is no friction, and so, in a certain sense, the conditions are ideal; but also, just because of that, we are unable to walk. We want to walk: so we need friction. Back to the rough ground! LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-126, our italics) – Philosophy just puts everything before us, and neither explains nor deduces anything. – Since everything lies open to view, there is nothing to explain. For whatever may be hidden is of no interest to us. The name “philosophy” might also be given to what is possible before all new discoveries and inventions. Irundyk  – Are you trying to say that ‘praxiological proof’ is ‘technological proof’? And that Raju, instead of trying to dissolve mathematics in the empirical sciences, empiricizing it, should, on the contrary, dissolve the empirical sciences in mathematics, normalizing them? Mosapyr – What I mean is that the distinctions between knowing and knowing how, between pure and applied sciences, between empirical and normative sciences, between science and technology, are false. Knowledge is only knowledge if it is know- how in a normative language game that is played in a form of life, be it ‘real’ or ‘virtual’, and not in a possible fictional form of life. And there is no know-how that is not guided by a technique, algorithm or invented norm. Oiepé – Following your line of reasoning, Mosapyr, Raju’s claim that practicing a decolonizing mathematics education would consist in orienting it towards a new philosophy of mathematics – empirical-inductivist, empirical-fallibilist, pragmatic or dialectical historical-materialist  – would be wrong, since you argue that a praxeological image of mathematics should not strictly be seen as a new philosophy. Wouldn’t it, however, be a new philosophy of technology? Mosapyr – At least it would not be a dogmatic philosophical orientation of mathematics or mathematics education. We could say that it is a non-dogmatic therapeutic philosophical orientation, since dogmatism does not combine with decolonialism. Oiepé – Here, I wonder if what LW calls dogmatism is not the same as what Raju calls theologization. And if it seems to me legitimate to make such an identification, I could also say that what LW points out as the legitimate limit of philosophizing, so that we do not fall into dogmatism, would be exactly what Raju denounces as the removal or placement in parentheses of the “empirical world” on the part of scholastic, theological or logical-formal mathematics practiced by Western mathematicians. For, as LW says, when our ordinary language decides to go on holidays, it stops working on the hard and rocky soil of the praxeological “civil world”, and our discourse tends to commit the greatest metaphysical blunders and follies, it loses its common sense, turning itself into a biased, partial, ideological, and theological nonsense. Mbó – Our discourse tends to become fake news, as I prefer to say. Oiepé – If it is indeed true that Western mathematics is a huge fake news, then, for Wittgenstein, fake news would be just a false step in philosophizing.

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Mokoi – The conclusion I reach is the same as that of Raju: that the theological narrative of formal mathematics is not just a false step in philosophizing, but a false step in ideologizing… a colonizing ideology. LW (Wittgenstein, 1976, p. 13–14) – I am proposing to talk about the foundations of mathematics. An important problem arises from the subject itself: How can I – or anyone who is not a mathematician – talk about this? What right has a philosopher to talk about mathematics? One might say: From what I have learned at school – my knowledge of elementary mathematics – I know something about what can be done in the higher branches of the subject. […] People who have talked about the foundations of mathematics have constantly been tempted to make prophecies-­ going ahead of what has already been done. As if they had a telescope with which they can’t possibly reach the moon, but can see what is ahead of the mathematician who is flying there. That is not what I am going to do at all. In fact, I am going to avoid it at all costs; it will be most important not to interfere with the mathematicians. I must not make a calculation and say, “That’s the result; not what Turing says it is”. […] One might think that I am going to give you, not new calculations but a new interpretation of these calculations. But I am not going to do that either. I am going to talk about the interpretation of mathematical symbols, but I will not give a new interpretation. Mathematicians tend to think that interpretations of mathematical symbols are a lot of jaw-some kind of gas which surrounds the real process, the essential mathematical kernel. A philosopher provides gas, or decoration-like squiggles on the wall of a room. I may occasionally produce new interpretations, not in order to suggest they are right, but in order to show that the old interpretation and the new are equally arbitrary. I will only invent a new interpretation to put side by side with an old one and say, “Here, choose, take your pick”. I will only make gas to expel old gas.4 Opá kó mbó – Well… based on this speech by LW, I will then make my arbitrary decolonial choice: I will produce no more chatter about the foundations of mathematics. And even less about mathematics. Because I came to the conclusion that neither mathematics nor mathematics education do not really need a philosophy… Mokoi – I think differently! It is precisely in order not to take the false step that we need not a new philosophy… and, even less, an old dogmatic, theological, ideological, logical philosophy that proves to be yet another new way of chatting, but rather a new way of philosophizing… a therapeutic philosophizing, similar to that practiced by LW himself! Mbó – But isn’t philosophizing doing philosophy? In philosophizing, LW makes and practices a philosophy… Mosapyr – For me, what is at stake is whether we need foundations, after all. This necessity can be seen as a false problem in philosophy. But we can, yes, practice a non- dogmatic, non-theological, non-ideological, non-logical philosophy. A philosophy without foundations, a new way of philosophizing…  The way in which LW sought to challenge the fundamentalist view of mathematics in his introductory speech to the set of classes on the foundations of mathematics taught by him in Cambridge, from 1929 to 1944. 4

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LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-109) – Philosophy is a struggle against the bewitchment of our understanding by the resources of our language. LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-119) – The results of philosophy are the discovery of some piece of plain nonsense and the bumps that the understanding has got by running up against the limits of language. They a these bumps a make us see the value of that discovery. LW (Wittgenstein, PI-124) – Philosophy must not interfere in any way with the actual use of language, so it can in the end only describe it. For it cannot justify it either. It leaves everything as it is. It also leaves mathematics as it is, and no mathematical discovery can advance it. A “leading problem of mathematical logic” is for us a problem of mathematics like any other. Mbó – I think, then, that what is at stake here is to think about other ways of seeing and practicing philosophy, different from those that seek foundations and essences… Ways that do not tempt us to move away from the rough ground of life, from forms of life. LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-309) – What is your aim in philosophy? To show the fly the way out of the fly-bottle. Mokoi – But LW does not show the fly how to get out of the bottle by teaching him one way or another, an old or new philosophy, but by pointing out the ways to avoid, signaling him how to philosophize deconstructively, in a non-dogmatic way, repeatedly diving into the river of doubt… and not being easily carried away by the current of the river… LW (Wittgenstein, 2011, p.  8)  – I must plunge into the water of doubt again and again. Oiepé – But isn’t it Raju himself who insists that we should educate and educate ourselves mathematically  – in a critical and decolonizing way  – by making mathematics oriented towards a new philosophy? When he says that mathematics education should not be separated from science education, what new philosophy would that be? A new scientism? A new computational pragmatism? RCK (Raju, 2011b, p. 282–283, our italics) – This theological Western view of math was globalised by the political force of colonialism. It was stabilised by Macaulay’s well known intervention with the education system, and the continued support for it is readily understood on Huntington’s doctrine of soft-power. And this way of teaching math continues to be uncritically followed to this day even after independence. This is the first attempt to try to re-examine and critically re-evaluate the Western philosophy of math and suggest an alternative to European ethnomathematics. The new philosophy proposed by this author has now been renamed “zeroism”, to emphasize that it is being used for its practical value, and does not depend upon (the interpretation of) any Buddhist texts about sunyavada. A key idea is that of mathematics as an adjunct physical theory. Another key idea is that, like infinitesimals, small numbers may be neglected, as in a computer calculation, but on the new grounds that ideal representations are erroneous, for they can never be achieved in reality (which is continuously changing). (Exactly what constitutes a discardable “small” number, or a “practical infinitesimal”, is decided by the context, as with formal infinitesimals or order-counting.) This is the

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antithesis of the Western view that mathematics being “ideal” must be “perfect”, and that only metaphysical postulates for manipulating infinity (as in set theory), laid down by authoritative Western mathematicians, are reliable, and all else is erroneous. LW (Wittgenstein, 2017, PI-218) – Whence the idea that the beginning of a series is a visible section of rails invisibly laid to infinity? Well, we might imagine rails instead of a rule. And infinitely long rails correspond to the unlimited application of a rule. CKR (Raju, 2021, p. 44–45) – Though colonial education supposedly came for the sake of science most people entirely overlook the actual consequences. The fact is that after nearly 2 centuries of colonial education the net result is (a) widespread mathematical illiteracy and (b) belief in all sorts of superstitions and myths about mathematics. A typical such belief is that mathematics is universal and cannot be decolonized […]. This total mathematical illiteracy among the colonially educated is combined with two deep-seated superstitions: (a) the superstition (most manifest in Wikipedia) that the West and only the West is trustworthy, and (b) the belief that any change from blindly imitating the West can only be for the worse. (“Doomsday awaits the unbelievers”). The colonized hence resist change. For example, a stock argument of the ignorant against change, and in favour of current math, is that “it works”. But what exactly works? The ignorant don’t understand how rocket trajectories, for example, are calculated. They conflate normal and formal math, the way rationalists conflate normal reason (reason plus facts) with formal or church reason (reason minus facts, faithbased reason). What works (and works better) is NOT the formal mathematics of proof but the normal mathematics of calculation (much of it imported by Europe from India for its practical value, starting from elementary arithmetic algorithms). […] A simple rule of the thumb is that anything which can be done on a computer (such as calculation of rocket trajectories) is normal mathematics, and most practical applications of math today involve computers. The bigger problem is this: from this position of the darkest ignorance wrapped in the deepest superstition, even discussing an alternative to Western ethnomathematics is taboo for the colonized. LW5 – David Hilbert said that “no one will expel us from the paradise created by Cantor”. I must tell you that I would not dream of expelling someone from this paradise. I would do something quite different. I would try to show him that it is not  The dialogue between the specters of LW and Alan Turing (AT) that followed is a partial reconstitution of excerpts from the lectures on philosophy of mathematics given by LW in 1939, at the University of Cambridge. Such reconstitution is based on Monk (1991, p.  401–428) and on (Wittgenstein, 1998). According to Monk, the purpose of these classes was the deconstruction of the idolatry of science, since LW considered it the most salient symptom of the decadence of Western culture. Turing had also given, at the same institution, a course entitled “Fundamentals of Mathematics,” which was nothing more than an introduction to mathematical logic and the technique of proving theorems of a rigorously axiomatic system. The more general context of the conversation between AT and LW that we selected here was the possibility of reinterpreting mathematics in the light of Cantor’s work, which was seen by LW as a quagmire of philosophical confusion. The problem around which the conversation revolves is the role of contradiction in the calculations of logical-formal mathematics and in human activities. 5

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a paradise – so that he would then leave on his own initiative. I would say, “You are welcome; but look around.” LW – The mathematical problems of what have been called the foundations of mathematics have, for us, as much foundation as a painted stone supports a painted tower. LW – The mathematician discovers nothing. A mathematical proof does not establish the truth of a conclusion; it only fixes the meaning of certain signs. The “inexorability” of mathematics, therefore, does not consist in the certain knowledge of mathematical truths, but in the fact that mathematical propositions are grammatical. For example, to deny that “two plus two equals four” is not to disagree with a widely held opinion on a matter of fact; is to reveal ignorance of the meaning of the terms involved. Do you understand me, Turing? AT – I understand, but I don’t agree that it’s just a matter of giving new meanings to words. LW – You don’t object to anything I say. You agree with every word. But it disagrees with the idea you believe underlies it. AT – You cannot be confident about applying your calculus until you know that there is no hidden contradiction in it. LW  – There seems to me to be an enormous mistake there. For your calculus gives certain results, and you want the bridge not to break down. I’d say things can go wrong in only two ways: either the bridge breaks down or you have made a mistake in your calculation – for example you multiplied wrongly. But you seem to think there may be a third thing wrong: the calculus is wrong. AT – No. What I object to is the bridge falling down. LW – But how do you know that it will fall down? Isn’t that a question of physics? It may be that if one throws dice in order to calculate the bridge it will never fall down. AT – If one takes Frege’s symbolism and gives someone the technique of multiplying in it, then by using a Russell paradox he could get a wrong multiplication. LW – This would come to doing something which we would not call multiplying. You give him a rule for multiplying and when he gets to a certain point he can go in either of two ways, one of which leads him all wrong. AT – You seem to be saying, that if one uses a little common sense, one will not get into trouble. LW – That is NOT what I mean at all. My point is rather that a contradiction cannot lead one astray because it leads nowhere at all. One cannot calculate wrongly with a contradiction, because one simply cannot use it to calculate. One can do nothing with contradictions, except waste time puzzling over them. Mbó – I came to the conclusion that there is no fundamental divergence between Raju and LW, regarding the way of seeing and evaluating Western logical-formalized mathematics, said to be unique and universal: an infinite chatter… an infinite ‘metachatter’, empty, unproductive, useless, contradictory, ideological and colonizing coated with a surface layer of so-called “pure”, “rigorous”, “scientific”, “impartial” and “neutral” varnish. The difference between the two is consists in that Raju tends to approximate, or even to see as indistinct, scientific and mathematical practices, whereas Wittgenstein seems to make a subtle and not radical distinction between them.

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Mosapyr – And in your view, what would that distinction be? Mbó – For LW, scientific and mathematical practices seem to interact with natural beings, making them participate in language games aimed at fulfilling different purposes. In scientific language games, human participants, to achieve different reproducible social purposes, seek to interact dialectically with natural beings involved in the game, searching for patterns and regularities in the ways they behave in these interactions. In turn, in mathematical language games, human beings invent and impose patterns of regularity on other beings involved in the game, so that normative social purposes are unequivocally achieved. For both Raju and LW, mathematics actually invented and practiced in different fields of human activity cannot be seen as a transposition or application of fundamentalist logico-­formal mathematics. Even because, when we participate in language games guided by normative purposes, in any context of human activity, the rules that guide our actions are not rules of formal logic, based on the principle of identity, the principle of the excludedthird and the principle of non-contradiction. They are rules or empirical statements that we invent or follow, so that the intended purposes, in each situation, are unequivocally achieved. We cannot, therefore, confuse the different normative grammars of each mathematical language game with the normative grammar of classical logic that guides the language games of western logico-formal mathematics. Hence, normativity is not synonymous with logico-formal coherence. A bridge may or may not fall, not because the algorithms or calculations used in its construction respected or transgressed the principles of classical logic, but because they were or were not followed correctly or for other unforeseen reasons. Between the well-founded or ill-founded foundations of bridges and architectural buildings and the supposed logical-formal foundations of Western mathematics there is an impassable abyss, but one that would not even need to be bridged. You can be an excellent demonstrator of theorems, but not even know how to build a toy bridge… Conversely, you can be an exceptional architect who designs and builds bridges and aqueducts – as Eupalinos did, in the sixth century BC – and not knowing how to demonstrate a theorem of the most elementary or verbally and rigorously enunciate the definition of angle. I think, then, that the central misunderstanding that runs through our entire discussion concerns the role that classical binary logic, and therefore contradiction, plays in the effective ways of inventing and practicing mathematics in different fields of human activity. LW (Wittgenstein, PI-125, our italics) – It is not the business of philosophy to resolve a contradiction by means of a mathematical or logico-mathematical discovery, but to render surveyable the state of mathematics that troubles us a the state of affairs before the contradiction is resolved. (And in doing this one is not sidestepping a difficulty). Here the fundamental fact is that we lay down rules, a technique, for playing a game, and that then, when we follow the rules, things don’t turn out as we had assumed. So that we are, as it were, entangled in our own rules. This entanglement in our rules is what we want to understand: that is, to survey. It throws light on our concept of meaning something. For in those cases, things turn out otherwise than we had meant, foreseen. That is just what we say when, for example, a contradiction appears: “That’s not the way I meant it”. The civil status of a contradiction, or its status in civic life that is the philosophical problem.

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Mosapyr – I think what LW is trying to say is the same as Raju: that we should throw away the pure, ideal, intelligible, metaphysical and ‘teleotheological’ ladder that gives us access to the logical world of ‘frictionless ice’ and face, without fear, the problems and challenges posed by the “civil world” of forms of life, the “civil world” of human activities, the praxeological “civil world”, which Raju, unfortunately, does not seem to distinguish from the “empirical world”. Oiepé – What would LW mean by the expression “civil world”? He also uses it in another passage of his work, this time in connection with mathematics: LW (RFM-IV-2, 1998, our italics) – I want to say: it is essential to mathematics that be made civil uses of its signs as well. It is the use outside mathematics and, so, the meanings of signs, that makes the sign-games into mathematics. Mosapyr  – I think what LW meant by this is that a mathematical language game is not characterized by the types of objects or beings that participate in it, but by what we can do algorithmically – that is, mechanically – with them in a normative game of language. And, in this sense, knitting a blouse can be seen as a mathematical language game, even though the objects that participate in it, that is, threads, needles, etc., have nothing to do with objects or concepts of Western logical-formal mathematics. And what can legitimately characterize it as a mathematician is the existence of a knitting algorithm that, if followed to the letter, allows us to make a blouse, according to the previously planned model. Oiepé – I see that this new image of mathematics allows for an unlimited and unusual expansion of what both Lakatos and Perminov understood by “informal mathematics”, as well as what Raju calls “normal mathematics” (“mathematics plus facts”), as opposed to “formal mathematics”, that is, to mathematics abstracted or independent of the facts of the empirical world. I understand that LW extends mathematical language practices or games to the entire “civil world”, which I identify with the world of fields of human activity, that is, with forms of life. Irundyk – I conclude from our therapeutic conversation about the possibilities of deconstructing the supposed uniqueness and universality of Western logicalformal mathematics and the philosophies that support it that an indiscipline therapeutic- decolonial way of educating and educating oneself mathematically, of researching in mathematics education and of forming educators need neither a philosophy of mathematics nor a philosophy of mathematics education. Mbó – I disagree! We need both an anti-colonizing philosophy of mathematics and an anti-colonizing philosophy of education! Mokoi – Don’t you think, Mbó, that we would need to discuss the implications that an anti-colonial way of philosophizing would bring to the classroom? TM (Macaulay, 1835) – I have travelled across the length and breadth of India and I have not seen one person who is a beggar, who is a thief, such wealth I have seen in this country, such high moral values, people of such high caliber, that I do not think we would ever conquer this country, unless we break the very back bone of this nation, which is her spiritual and cultural heritage, and therefore, I propose that we replace her old and ancient education system, her culture, for if the Indians think that all that is foreign and English is good and greater than their

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own, they will lose their self esteem, their native culture and they will become what we want them, a truly dominated nation. […] Higher studies … [need a] language not vernacular… What then shall that language be? One-half of the committee maintain that it should be the English. The other half strongly recommend the Arabic and Sanscrit… I have no knowledge of either Sanscrit or Arabic; but I have done what I could to form a correct estimate of their value. I have read translations of the most celebrated Arabic and Sanscrit works… I am quite ready to take the oriental learning at the valuation of the orientalists themselves. I have never found one among them who could deny that a single shelf of a good European library was worth the whole native literature of India and Arabia. CKR (Raju, 2011b, p. 21–22) – In India, Western soft power and the colonial education project began with Macaulay in 1835. The BJP6 election manifesto for the previous election stated that Macaulay admired Indian civilization, but wanted to “break [its] very backbone”, by introducing English education. The BJP manifesto stated “India’s prosperity, its talents and the state of its high moral society can be best understood by what Thomas Babington Macaulay stated in his speech of February 02, 1835, in the British Parliament. Such falsehoods do not help fight academic imperialism: a true understanding of the causes is needed to cure the malaise. Macaulay, a racist to the core, and an admirer of other racists like Locke and Hume (both of whom he cites in his infamous Minute of 1835), had nothing nice to say about Indian civilization or the then- prevailing system of Sanskrit and Arabic education in India. Mbó – Help me Lord!7: Christian-theological mathematics that exponentially raised to Christian-theological mathematics education resulted in the only textbook of our Western mathematics education: the Bible, that is, “Euclid”! Down with Bishop Sardinha!8 OA9 – Down with all the importers of canned counsciousness. The palpable existence of life. And the pre-logical mentality for Mr. Lévy-Bruhl to study. We

 BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party) is one of the two main political parties that have ruled the Republic of India since 2014. It is a right-wing nationalist party that from 2020 has become the largest political party in the country in terms of representation in national parliament and state legislatures 7  The interjection originally used in Portuguese is “Cruz credo” (“Cross Creed”). Originating in Catholic- Christian culture, it literally means “I believe in the cross.” It is used to express fear, disgust, or repugnance at something. (https://www.significados.com.br/cruz-credo/). 8  This is Pero Fernandes Sardinha (1496–1556), a Portuguese theologian who was provider and vicar general in India and the first bishop of Brazil. The ship in which he was returning to Brazil on July 16, 1556 sank in the Coruripe River, in the State of Alagoas. The crew were captured by the Caeté Indians who literally killed and ate them. 9  Excerpts from the Cannibalist Manifesto (ANDRADE, 1928) by the Brazilian writer Oswald de Andrade. Ironically decolonial, the manifesto was a reaction of Brazilian modernist artists to cultural colonization, at the same time that European modernist artists began to criticize the cultural values and standards of Western civilization. It was published in 1928, after the Dada Manifestos by the German writer Hugo Ball and the Romanian poet Tristan Tzara and the Surrealist Manifesto by the French writer André Breton. 6

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want the Carib10 Revolution. Greater than the French Revolution. The unification of all productive revolts for the progress of humanity. Without us, Europe wouldn’t even have its meager declaration of thr rights of man. […] We never permitted the birth of logic among us. […] Down with the truth of missionary peoples, defined by the sagacity of a cannibal, the Viscount of Cairu11: – It’s a lie told again and again. But those who cames here weren’t crusaders.12 They were fugitives from a civilization we are eating, because we are strong and vindictive like the Jabuti.13 Irundyk – These important clarifications helped to reinforce my point of view that a decolonizing school mathematics education does not need an anti-colonizing philosophy neither of mathematics nor of mathematics education, but only a therapeutic- cannibalist philosophizing that clarifies and problematizes the effects and affections – environmental, political, legal, technological, ideological, ethnic, ethical, aesthetic, etc. – of carrying out mathematical practices – that is, of language games aimed at fulfilling normative purposes – on the different forms of life in the contemporary world. Mosapyr – This speech reverberates Oswald de Andrade’s cannibalist cry – contained in his way of deconstructing the false binary opposition “tupi or not tupi, that is the question”14 imposed by Shakespearean Hamlet on the colonized peoples of Abya Yala lands15  – and the therapeutic cry16 that LW launches against Frazer’s  Caraíba designates both one of the first indigenous communities with which the Portuguese came into contact in Brazil, and a linguistic family to which several Brazilian tribes belonged. 11  José da Silva Lisboa, nineteenth-century Brazilian liberal economist who supported the expulsion of the Jesuits from Brazil by the Marquis of Pombal. 12  Portuguese coin made of gold or silver. 13  Reptile that inhabits Brazilian forests; in some indigenous cultures, represents perseverance and strength. 14  Third sentence of the Cannibalist Manifesto (ANDRADE, 1928). The next sentence is: “Against all catechesis!”. 15  Term used by the Guna indigenous people – who inhabit the territories of Panama and Colombia – to refer to the continent where they lived since before the arrival of Columbus and other Europeans. “Abya Yala” comes from the words “Abe” (blood) and “Yala” (space, territory), etymologically meaning “land in full maturity” or “land of vital blood.” The term is also used as an appeal and support for the autonomy and epistemic decolonization of indigenous populations, following the example of the Guna Revolution of 1925. Even after the clarification of the historiographical controversy surrounding the attribution of the name America to the lands of Abya Yala, it was the female version of the name “Américo” that ended up naming the new continent, as Martin Waldseemüller attests, in whose hands a letter from Bartolomeu Marchionni had fallen, telling the following fake news that ended up deciding the name of the new continent: “Currently, the parts of the Earth called Europe, Asia and Africa have already been fully explored and another part was discovered by Amerigo Vespuccio, as can be seen in the accompanying maps. And as Europe and Asia are named after women, I see no reason why we cannot call this part Amerige, that is, the land of Amerigo, or America, in honor of the sage who discovered it.” (https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Abya_Yala); (https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Americo_Vespucci); (https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Bartolomeu_Marchionni) 16  Irundyk speaks with the conviction that the whole of LW’s work – which has as its emblematic decolonial mark the therapeutic-grammatical critique he directs to the monumental work entitled 10

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colonizing scientistic dogmatism. This therapeutic-cannibalist philosophizing is not a form of problematization that could be seen as ideologically or doctrinally oriented, nor supposedly neutral, pluralist or multicultural, but a problematization committed to a vital political-praxeological pan-ethics oriented towards the extinction of inequalities and discrimination and for the promotion of a dignified, democratic and sustainable life for all lives and forms of life on the planet. Mokoi – I agree and add that from the algorithmic-praxeological perspective of our decolonial critique of Western logical-formal mathematics, mathematics in the plural are no longer seen as any kind of linguistic or logical-symbolic-formal narratives or meta- narratives and are seen as a multiplicity of algorithmic, autonomous, complete, independent and non-competing cultural practices that prove capable of solving a set of normative social problems that require such practices to function as a standard of rectification, not of themselves, but of the iteration of themselves. That is why such practices are not open to rectification. Opá kó mbó – Following this line of reasoning, I could say, for example, that counting practices vary not only depending on the objects to be counted, but also on the guiding purposes of counting, on the available mediating elements, etc.: practices of counting fish are obviously distinct from practices of counting the amount of lightning that falls in a given geographic region, in a given time interval. Counting practices for the same object may also vary depending on the forms of life in which they are carried out: fish counting practices vary among different indigenous communities and may differ from those practiced by fishing industries, environmental groups, etc. All these practices also differ from those invented by the community of professional mathematicians to count finite or infinite abstract number sets, random events, etc. I remembered a speech by Olo Wintiyape, an indigenous Guna from Colombia: OW – (Olo Wintiyape apud Tamayo, 2017, p. 93) – We don’t have a generic standard for establishing correspondence relationships, as in Western mathematics, but we establish correspondence relationships just like you do. However, these relationships cannot be independent of the quality of the object because, in the Guna The Golden Bough, from the Scottish anthropologist James George Frazer (1966) – can be seen not exactly as a philosophy or a new philosophy, but as a (self)therapeutic philosophizing about a set of philosophical problems, among them, the basic problem of language (Miguel & Tamayo, 2020). The core of LW’s (2011) critique falls on the scientistic assumption that guides Frazer’s Whig historiographical-anthropological narrative, which leads him to construct a false image of Nemi’s practice of succession of the priesthood, which is produced through an illegitimate mechanism of ‘scientification’ that transforms a dogmatic- religious practice of a symbolic-ritualist nature into a scientific hypothesis open to empirical verification or refutation […] LW’s objection to the Frazerian desire to scientifically explain a dogmatic-religious practice is from the the same nature as his objection to Frazer’s inverse desire to dogmatically explain a scientific hypothesis for which it is possible to accumulate a set of empirical evidence that reinforces or refutes it (Miguel et al., 2020, p. 518). The colonizing character of Frazer’s work can be equated with that of the British historian Thomas Macaulay, from which Frazer borrows the epigraph and literary style for his work.

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cosmovision, classification is vital to know the world. This means that, even with this similarity, there are, above all, differences that prevent us from saying that our counting practices can be seen as numerical systems, just as the West understands this concept that even I would not be able to explain what it really means. CT (Tamayo, 2017, p. 243) – Such usage follows the rules of the grammar of their culture and not the grammar of the counting practice of school mathematics. Words that describe counting practices are related to the qualities of the objects involved in counting. According to Dule grammar, a description of the quality of countable objects is a way of knowing the world. The act of telling is seen as cosmogonic, that is, as a base of historical, botanical, theological, agricultural and artistic knowledge. On the other hand, the practice of waga counting, as it is used in school, refers to the action of counting the number of elements in a set of objects. In other words, in several academic mathematics texts we will find that counting is carried out by successively corresponding to an object in a collection, a number of the natural succession. Mokoi – What Tamayo describes also points us to the implications for human and non-human lives generated by this way of conceiving mathematics. We are experiencing the extinction of all forms of life around us, especially indigenous, riverside, quilombola, black and Amazonian life forms with all their cosmovisions. And these ways of philosophizing that I think are echoed in the transgressive legacy of LW come to postpone the end of the world, as Ailton Krenak (2020), a Brazilian indigenous of the Krenak people says. Opá kó mbó – An identity that is neither absolute nor relative, neither local nor universal, neither true nor false, neither rational nor irrational, neither logical nor ideological, of a mathematics – that is, what characterizes, singularizes, defines, and differs from all other mathematics  – it is not determining, decisively or unconditionally from the order of the historical, the spatiotemporal, the territorial, the geopolitical, the contextual, the communitarian, or from the ethno-community identity, but actually from the order of the algorithmic-praxeological, from the iterable in different temporalities, spatialities and contextualities, that is, from the order of technical reproducibility and the desire for unequivocal and unambiguous control of the actions and interactions of the participants of an algorithmic-normative language game. In fact, it is always good to remember that a mathematical practice is unequivocal, but not univocal, because it is always possible to achieve the same normative purpose through different algorithms. Oiepé – By the way, it’s always good to remember that Joy is the casting out nines!, as Oswald de Andrade told us in his 1928 Cannibal Manifest (Andrade, 1928). Mbó – It is always good to remember that, since a calculation endowed with the power to verify the correctness of the application of another calculation is assumed, the “casting out nines rule” is nothing but a “fake news” that nothing proofs… Joy is the proof of itself! Irundyk – It is true! But it is also true that the joy of some is almost always the sadness of the majority. Therefore, it can always be cannibalically evaluated and

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rectified on a case-by-case basis. That’s why we are cannibals! ASÉ O’U TORYBA ‘ARA ÎABI’ÕNDUARA!17 Acknowledgments  We thank the researcher João José R.  L. de Almeida at the University of Campinas (Brazil) for the first translation of this text into English. We thank Eduardo de Almeida Navarro, professor at the University of São Paulo for translating the title of this chapter into the ancient Tupi language.

References Aleksandrov, A. D., Kolmogorov, N. A., & Laurentiev, M. A. (1999) Mathematics its contents, methods and meaning. Translation edited by S. H. Gould. Dover Publications, Inc. Andrade, O. (1928). Cannibalist Manifesto. Revista de Antropofagia, v. I, n. I. https://writing. upenn.edu/library/Andrade_Cannibalistic_Manifesto.pdf Barbosa, L.  A. (1956). Curso de Tupi antigo. Livraria São José. Available from: http://etnolinguistica.wdfiles.com/local%2D%2Dfiles/biblio%3Abarbosa-­1956-­curso/Barbosa_1956_ CursoDeTupiAntigo_BDCN_CNic.pdf De Jesus, F. R. D. (2015). Indisciplina e transgressão na escola. [Doctoral thesis, Universidade Estadual de Campinas]. Institutional Repository - Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Ferreirós, J. (2009). Book reviews about RAJU (2007). Philosophia Mathematica, 17(3), 378–381. Frazer, J. G. (1966). The Golden Bough. Macmillan; St. Martin’s Press. Frege, G. (1960). The foundations of arithmetic: A logico-mathematical inquiry into the concept of number. Translated by J.L. Austin. Second Revised Edition. Harper & Brothers. Hogben, L. (1971). The vocabulary of science. Stein and Day Publishers. Hogben, L. (1973). The beginnings of science: Astronomer priest and ancient mariner. St Martin’s Press. Krenak, A. (2020). Ideias para adiar o fim do mundo. Companhia das letras. Lakatos, I. (2015). Proofs and refutations: The lógica of mathematical discovery, J.  Worrall & E. Zahar (Eds.). Cambridge Philosophy Classics edition. Macaulay, T.  B. (1835). Minute on Education. Available on: http://www.languageinindia.com/ april2003/macaulay.html Miguel, A., & Tamayo, C. (2020). Wittgenstein, Therapy and decolonial school education. Educação & Realidade, Porto Alegre, 45(3), 1–39. Miguel A., Souza E. G., & Tamayo, C. (2020). E se Deus fosse mulher? Ajuricaba virou Píton e Píton virou Petúnia que virou Ajuricaba. In A.  Miguel, C.R.  Vianna, & J.F.  Corrêa (Orgs.), Uma historiografia terapêutica de acasos. Navegando, pp.  463–536. Available on: https:// www.editoranavegando.com/_files/ugd/35e7c6_ac846230a1ea41bc913932f5849292b4.pdf Mill, J. S. (2009). A system of logic. Harper & Brothers, Publishers.

 Aphorism “We eat every joy of every day” written in the ancient Tupi language (Barbosa, 1956, p. 9). “Currently, more than 160 languages and dialects are spoken by indigenous peoples in Brazil. […] Before the arrival of the Portuguese, however, in Brazil alone this number must have been close to a thousand. In the colonization process, the Tupinambá language, as it is the most spoken language along the Atlantic coast, it was incorporated by a large part of the settlers and missionaries, being taught to the indigenous people in the missions and recognized as the General Language or Nheengatu. Until today, many words of Tupi origin are part of the vocabulary of Brazilians.” Contemporary Brazilian linguists often refer to it as a large “linguistic trunk”, alongside Macro-Jê and 19 other language families that do not present sufficient degrees of similarities to be able to be grouped into trunks (https://pib.socioambiental.org/pt/L%C3%ADnguas). 17

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Monk, R. (1991). Ludwig Wittgenstein: The duty of genius. Penguin Books. Perminov, V.  Y. (1988). On the reliability of mathematical proofs. Revue Internationale de Philosophie, 42(167), 500–508. Raju, C. K. (2011a). Teaching mathematics with a different philosophy Part I: Formal mathematics as biased metaphysics. Science and Culture, 77(7–8), 274–279. Raju, C. K. (2011b). Ending academic imperialism: A beginning. Publish by Penang (Malaysia): Multiversity & Citizens International. Raju, C. K. (2021). A singular Nobel. Mainstream, VOL LIX No 7, New Delhi, January 30. Rorty, R. (1981). Philosophy and the mirror of nature. Princeton University Press. Rorty, R. (1998). Contra a unidade. Jornal Folha de São Paulo, Caderno Mais, 22/03/1998, p. 7–8. Said, E. W. (2003). Orientalism. Penguin. Souza, E., Tamayo, C., & Bento, M. M. (2022). Ludwig Wittgenstein, mathematics, therapy and life: Research from the group on education, language and cultural practices in Brazil. The Mathematics Enthusiast, 19, 1. Available at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/tme/vol19/iss1/13 Tamayo, C. (2017). Vení, vamos hacamar el mundo hasta que te asustes: uma terapia do desejo de escolarização moderna. PhD Thesis. Universidade Estadual de Campinas. Waismann, F. (1979). Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Vienna circle: Conversations recorded by Friedrich Waismann. Blackwell. Wittgenstein, L. (1976). Wittgenstein’s lectures on the Foundations of Mathematics, C. Diamond (Ed.). Cornell University Press. Wittgenstein, L. (1998). Remarks on the foundation of Mathematics, G. H. von Wright, R. Rhees, & G. E. M. Anscombe (Eds.). Blackwell Publishers. Wittgenstein, L. (2009). Philosophische Untersuchungen/Philosophical Investigations. Translated by Gertrude E.M.  Anscombe, Peter M.S.  Hacker, and Joachim Schulte. Rev. 4th ed. P.M.S. Hacker and Joachim Schulte. Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Wittgenstein, L. (2011). Observações sobre “O Ramo Dourado de Frazer. Transl. Almeida, J. J. R. L. Bilíngue. Deriva. Wittgenstein, L. (2017) Philosophische Untersuchungen/Investigações filosóficas. Transl. Almeida JJRL Bilíngue ed. Ger-Port. http://www.psicanaliseefilosofia.com.br/textos/ InvestigacoesFilosoficas-­Original.pdf

Chapter 19

Mathematics Education and Ubuntu Philosophy: The Analysis of Antiracist Mathematical Activity with Digital Technologies Maurício Rosa

19.1 Introduction We begin by presenting what we understand by “mathematics education,” because this act of educating is concerned with “[…] the developing and the nurturing for development, including in this process the ways of intervening, so that nutrition is satisfied and strengthens a direction, which is that of development” (Bicudo, 2003a, p.33, my translation1). In other words, we must develop ourselves to evolve as human beings, and, therefore, we understand that, initially, we need to recognize everyone as different/diverse and assume this difference/diversity without categorizing people into what arbitrarily may be considered as “normal” or even not. According to Davis (2013, p.1): We live in a world of norms. Each of us endeavors to be normal or else deliberately tries to avoid that state. We consider what the average person does, thinks, earns, or consumes. We rank our intelligence, our cholesterol level, our weight, height, sex drive, bodily dimensions along some conceptual line from subnormal to above average. We consume a minimum daily balance of vitamins and nutrients based on what an average human should consume. Our children are ranked in school and tested to determine where they fit into a normal curve of learning, of intelligence. Doctors measure and weigh them to see if they are above or below average on the height and weight curves. There is probably no area of contemporary life in which some idea of a norm, mean, or average has not been calculated. To understand the disabled body, one must return to the concept of the norm, the normal body. So much of writing about disability has focused on the disabled person as the object of study, just as the study of race has focused on the person of color. But as with recent scholarship on race,

 “[…] o desenvolver e o nutrir para o desenvolvimento, incluindo nesse processo os modos de intervir para que a nutrição se dê a contento e fortaleça uma direção, que é a do desenvolvimento.” 1

M. Rosa (*) Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_19

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which has turned its attention to whiteness and intersectionality, I would like to focus not so much on the construction of disability as on the construction of normalcy. I do this because the “problem” is not the person with disabilities; the problem is the way that normalcy is constructed to create the “problem” of the disabled person.

Moreover, this very “problem” is not with people with disabilities only, nor with black people, neither whomsoever. The problem actually relies on how we create or “calculate” the sense of normality. That is, as Frankenstein (1983) asks us, Which perspective do we build or “calculate” normality from? What interests with? Who does possibly care about this normality? Who is interested in this “calculation”? So, it is through mathematical calculation that we establish normality, but the reference to affirm what is and what is not normal is under a white, Eurocentric, male-­ heterosexual, and “without disabilities” standards. For example, the idea of establishing a mask of beauty through the golden ratio seems to forget the different, ignoring the massive amount of people, who would not fit in, as well as what it may mean to each of them not to fit in. We need to think about how to bring mathematics to help thinking about these issues of values, ethics, and meanings of standards. Our focus is on educating through mathematics, on progressing as a person/ people, and on understanding this mental, habitual, ideological, unconscious, or extremely conscious calculation. By “progressing,” we assume the dynamic process as a human being/as human beings, not materially as within the capitalistic perspective. Therefore, progressing needs to be understood as a common good, a social good, promoting freedom for all. Freedom to think, act, and learn is a political act: such act can be intentionally practiced in mathematics classes, once we all need to progress mathematically, that is, learn to measure and, above all, progress through mathematics. That is, we should learn to measure the common good, the social good, promoting a variety of materializations of freedom(s) for all without making anyone feel out of place. In other words, as professionals acting in the mathematics education field, we need to educate mathematically aiming at what really matters to educate through mathematics (Rosa, 2008, 2018). Thus, “mathematics,” capitalized, disciplinary, powerful, unique, and finished (Rosa & Bicudo, 2018) needs to be transgressed and transformed into a “strange mathematics.” We need to update our perception in order to highlight a new perception of their concept of mathematics, the one which makes sense, that is, discussing the mathematics (with lowercase letters (Rosa & Bicudo, 2018), which allow us to understand differences among people, understanding the value of the other that happens to emerge in a resistance space to prejudice, discrimination, homophobia, transphobia, and racism. According to Louro (2021, p.91, my translation2):

 “A resistência não será mais procurada apenas naqueles espaços explicitamente articulados como políticos. Por certo não se negará a importância de espaços ou movimentos que, declaradamente, se colocam no contraponto da imposição de normas heterossexuais, [brancas e androcêntricas] mas se passará a observar também outras práticas e gestos (ensaiados de outros tantos pontos) como capazes de se constituir em políticas de resistência.” 2

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Resistance [the attempt to prevent racism, for instance] will no longer be sought only in those spaces explicitly articulated as political. Certainly, the importance of spaces or movements that, avowedly, are placed in the counterpoint of the imposition of heterosexual, [white and androcentric] norms will not be denied, but other practices and gestures (rehearsed from as many points) will also be observed as capable of constitute resistance policies.

The rehearsing can take place in education spaces with teachers who teach mathematics or who will teach mathematics in the future (initial education), in order to start philosophically “queering” the curriculum, the pedagogies, the very taught “mathematics,” and the so called “one that must be taught” from nowadays. Such a rehearsing for resistance can reach and alter educational spaces through the insubordination of practices based, for example, on epistemological reflections about what mathematics is being taught, how it has been taught, and through what approach. The point hereby is constituting a disposition for the non-conformation with certain given terms and for the refusal to adjust oneself to social impositions commonly taken as “natural.” It is important to ask, for example, how can education with mathematics teachers promote reflections that support the fight against compulsory heterosexuality, misogyny, ageism, prejudice against people with disabilities, and, as the focus of this chapter, racism from the teachers? How can these reflections reach educational spaces, in order to produce an antiracist mathematics education? How to create activities, environments, and resources that come to disrupt, transgress, and provoke political and social reflections like this one? Reflections that will “ubuntu” mathematics? How to think of and foster a mathematics, that is for everyone, of everyone, with everyone, that is not done individually, that needs the other, and that needs an “us”? A mathematics that provides the understanding of the difference of skin color, race, and ethnicity, as just one more difference and that values it as one of the ways of being, in order to understand that there is no human group falling out of this these differences among their integrants. What are those differences for? Do they really matter? Therefore, our initial “estrangement” (or questioning confrontation) takes place as we perceive the need for a more fruitful dialogue about politics and society in the initial and continuing education with teachers of mathematics, because it seems to us that there is a habitus (Bourdieu, 1991a, b) of mathematics classes regarding about what should be taught, what in fact should be mathematics or what should be named mathematics and what it means in society. This habitus (Bourdieu, 1991a, b) presents to us a way of understanding mathematics fundamentally as a mechanical structure of calculations and exercises, of closed problems resolution, and of a method of applying formulas and having nothing to do with any social-political matters regarding sex, gender, and sexuality, as well as with disability and age, and, for matters of this chapter, with race issues. There is, in my view, a focus centered on mathematical contents historically constituted and evidenced as essential in a mathematics class, leaving aside the understanding of “why” were these “contents” picked? Where do they conduce us? Why were they constituted in the present way? Who did bring them to the classroom? And finally, and most relevant, How do I

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transform my mathematics class? How can I make mathematics itself strange? These considerations are what assign intentionality to this research, as they are investigated, theorized, destabilized, and possibly transgressed. The experience with digital technologies (TD) was one of the possible paths we chose to take. It reveals different crossroads in providing huge diversity and possibilities for thinking, reflection, and criticism. From this perspective, in Rosa (2008, p.52, my translation3) it is already possible to glimpse the perspective that: […] the cybernetic world enhances the vision of modern physics of unconnected time/ space, represented by Castells (2005) as a space of flows, in addition to highlighting the idea of multiple identities translated into online identities. This makes me think about the changes in conceptions of time, space, identity that have been taking place and that are now more evident with the information age, in which the Internet is a prominent actor.

In other words, Rosa (2008) and Rosa and Lerman (2011) highlight the role of DT as potentiators of identity performance, because they investigated how the construction of online identities is shown, through the RPG (role-playing game) online to the teaching and learning of definite integral (mathematical concept of differential and integral calculus), for example. In their research, they consider the performing practice with the Online RPG as “the playful process in this online mathematics education situation [, which] calls for understanding mathematical knowledge in interaction with the setting, as a social construction” (Rosa & Lerman, 2011, p.83). In this way, the construction of identities shows itself in transformation, immersion, and agency (Rosa, 2008) since these actions emerged from the identity performances unveiled in the digital environment. In Rosa (2008), it is possible to posit that the performance, the creation, and the construction of identities both in the RPG and in the world also take place through the construction of bodies. The construction of bodies in the world is reinforced by Dumas (2019, p. 2, my translation4) when referring to the conceptual construction of the “black body,” because, according to the author: The colonizers’ resolution of this issue was based, in a way, on a definition of the body inventing a race, not everyone’s, but the people to be enslaved. For this, the list of criteria already applied in Greece, for example, was not used. But the criterion based exclusively on the particularity of the African people: their territorial origin and the body defined by skin color, to the black phenotype.

 “[…] mundo cibernético potencializa a visão da física moderna de tempo/espaço não desvinculados, representado por Castells (2005) como espaço de fluxos, além de evidenciar a ideia de identidades múltiplas traduzidas em identidades online. Isso me faz pensar nas mudanças de concepções de tempo, espaço, identidade que vêm acontecendo e que agora são mais evidenciadas com a era da informática, na qual a Internet é ator proeminente.” 4  “A resolução dessa questão por parte dos colonizadores foi pautada, de certa forma, numa definição de corpo inventando uma raça, não a de todos, mas a do povo a ser escravizado. Para isso não foi usado o elenco de critérios já aplicados na Grécia, por exemplo. Mas, o critério baseado exclusivamente na particularidade do povo africano: a sua origem territorial e o corpo definido pela cor da pele, ao fenótipo negro.” 3

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In this way, the fabrication of bodies does not go beyond the playfulness of a game but permeates the intention of a group, its desires, and interests. According to Louro (2021, p. 80, my translation5): The bodies considered “normal” and “common” are also produced through a series of artifacts, accessories, gestures, and attitudes that society arbitrarily established as adequate and legitimate. We all use artifices and signs to present ourselves, to say who we are and who others are. However, who is interested in defining what is normal? How to define this normality? What are bodies that matter? This last question was inspired by Butler (2019) whose book has the title “Bodies that Matter: on the discursive limits of sex.” Identities are also shaped by bodies, which are conditioned by artifacts, accessories, gestures, and attitudes, which can remarkably transgress spaces and strongly evidence freedom, that is, the meaning of politics itself (Arendt, 2002). In this bias, in terms of education and mathematics education linked to re-signifying bodies, we believe that DT can also become artifices and signs of the constitution of these bodies, present ourselves, and carry out identity performances, in order to learn from these performances, respecting differences, understanding them. Increasingly, this learning happens with DT, which are already mobile and ubiquitous (Rosa & Caldeira, 2018). Also, DT are considered to enhance the constitution of knowledge (Rosa, 2018), mainly because they present a multimodal language, which favors the feasibility and possibility of thinking of and perceiving themselves as transgressors, as enabling different imaginary, constructed, and invented realities. In addition, we understand that mathematics education can highlight necessary dimensions for humanitarian development, both the political and social dimensions. This can be evidenced in this act of education, that is, the act of development which mathematics is taken as a reflective resource, language, and/or field of study articulated with digital technologies (DT). Thus, we show in this chapter how mathematics education can encourage/provoke the understanding/constitution of the social responsibility of students in the face of social issues, such as structural racism, which consistently permeates the majority of our realities, including the educational reality. In this way, we analyze an antiracist mathematical activity with digital technologies that discusses the diversity of skin colors as something that belongs to each one and everybody at the same time, as a structure that connects us. Regarding this, we use the African philosophy Ubuntu, which does not conceive the existence of a being independent of the other, but of a “being” that thinks, acts, and lives with others, be-ing-becoming, that is, a be-ing-becoming that promotes a transformation in reality from its agency with others, with nature, with life. For some people, the central idea of this philosophy may seem to be ignoring human individuality, focusing efforts on the social, and disregarding subjectivity. But that’s not what happens, the Ubuntu philosophy  “Os corpos considerados “normais” e “comuns” são, também, produzidos através de uma série de artefatos, acessórios, gestos e atitudes que uma sociedade arbitrariamente estabeleceu como adequados e legítimos. Todos nós nos valemos de artifícios e de signos para nos apresentarmos, para dizer quem somos e dizer quem são os outros.” 5

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makes it clear that subjectivity is important and that each one assumes their responsibility and performs their actions according to their desires and conceptions, a self-­ centered conception. However, it is different from the individualism we know. It goes beyond the individual/collective duality because the Ubuntu philosophy signals that there is an interconnection among human existences, assuming the integrity of these existences as a premise. Thus, in the first section, we highlight the hegemonic historicity of white bodies in society, in mathematics, and in the ways of doing mathematics, discussing this white hegemony and situating our issue in terms of structural racism. Then, we moved on to digital technologies, focusing mainly on possibilities of educational and mathematical educational discussion about racism and its interconnections. Moreover, we present and apply the Ubuntu philosophy as a theoretical contribution to support our analysis. We first highlight the intersections of this philosophy with educational possibilities, and we show how mathematics education can help to understand the conceptions of this philosophy. In view of this, we present hereby one definition for the so-called antiracist mathematical activities with DT, which consists of: Mathematical-Activities-with-Digital-Technologies [that] can be developed considering cultural aspects of a given context. These activities consider Digital Technologies (DT) participants in the cognitive process, that is, DT are not mere auxiliaries, they are not considered tools that expedite or motivating source of the educational process, exclusively. They condition the production of mathematical knowledge. (Rosa & Mussato, 2015, p.23, my translation6)

That is, according to Rosa (2020) more than tools, DTs are taken as resources, processes, and environments of a destining of revealing, as a revelation of what can be created, imagined, and discovered. In addition, these mathematical activities with DT assume an adjective which is the word “antiracist,” precisely because we consider the political field to which they are linked, because this is understood as the social space where the struggle takes place through speech and action, that is: Knowledge of the social world and, more precisely, the categories which make it possible, are the stake par excellence of the political struggle, a struggle which is inseparably theoretical and practical, over the power of preserving or transforming the social world by preserving or transforming the categories of perception of that world. (Bourdieu, 1991a, b, p.236)

Thus, we theoretically analyze the proposal of an antiracist mathematical activity with DT, to answer our research question “how to discuss racism in a mathematics class with Digital Technologies in a way that mathematical concepts support the discussion?” Therefore, we thought that an antiracist mathematical activity with DT provokes discussions about skin color and think through mathematics about socially  “Atividades-Matemáticas-com-Tecnologias-Digitais [que] podem ser desenvolvidas considerando aspectos culturais de um determinado contexto. Essas atividades consideram as Tecnologias Digitais (TD) partícipes do processo cognitivo, ou seja, as TD não são meras auxiliares, não são consideradas ferramentas que agilizam ou fonte motivadora do processo educacional, exclusivamente. Elas condicionam a produção do conhecimento matemático.” 6

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constructed ideas like racism. We understand that the analysis of this mathematical activity based on Ubuntu philosophy can provide important reflections for mathematics teachers and researchers in mathematics education regarding the role of mathematics in the world and, mainly, the role of mathematics in favor of an antiracist movement. It is worth taking into consideration that mathematics is not neutral, just as our positioning is not neutral. According to Shapiro (2021), Desmond Tutu, Archbishop Emeritus, who received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1984 stated “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” Although you think you have been neutral, you have definitely picked a side for your on and that was the oppressor’s side. This may also happen, if we take neutrality for not taking position between two parts of a contradiction or taking both sides, in order to set a balance and try to avoid the contradiction by promoting a triangle between us and the two parts, because this would be more comfortable to us than making a decision. From this perspective, we understand that when neutrality per se seeks balance and equality of conditions and is part of a field of equality of conditions, the act of not choosing, not taking a position, or taking both sides can be considered neutral. But when this “neutrality” is in a disproportionate field, where there is a supremacy of power, the act of calling oneself neutral is only a way of hiding the position already taken, that is, on the side of the oppressor. We must then reflect on our role as mathematics educators and on our social responsibility and political hexis and make ourselves aware of historical power struggles (Bourdieu, 1991a, b), specifically related to skin color-bound issues. Recovering the speech of those who be oppressed in these disputes is necessary and using mathematics to understand this.

19.2 The Temporality/Spatiality Marked by a White Mathematics When we talk about temporality/spatiality, we are closely linked to the idea of historicity, which according to Bicudo (2003b, p.75, my translation7) is: […] the feature of being historical – it is founded on the way of being of the pre-sence (dasein), understood as the human being who always is in the world temporally. […] The sense of pre-sence (dasein) attributed to this being, who we humanly are, is articulated by the understanding of what happens, of what happens in the over there, which is spatiality and temporality constituted in the ways in which one lives the space and the time.

In other words, encompassed by the presence of the human being in the world, we turn to the ways of being in the world, and among these, we highlight one

 “[…] caráter de ser histórico – está fundada no modo de ser da pre-sença, entendida como o ser humano que sempre é no mundo temporalmente. […] O sentido de pre-sença atribuído a este ser que humanamente somos é articulado pela compreensão do que ocorre, do que se dá no aí que é espacialidade e temporalidade constituídas nos modos de ele viver o espaço e o tempo.” 7

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specific way: the way called whiteness, which has been said to carry with it, among other things, the mathematical “truth,” the right, the correct, what is “normal” to understand, and the “correct” lens through which we read and write the world. Sometimes, the historically constituted whiteness is not perceived, or assumed, many times it is even denied. Nonetheless: This lack of attention to whiteness leaves it invisible and neutral in documenting mathematics as a racialized space. Racial ideologies, however, shape the expectations, interactions, and kinds of mathematics that students experience. (Battey & Leyva, 2016, p. 49)

This means that the “mathematics” worked in the school, which is “white”(i.e., a “white mathematics,” because it is presented as coming from the theoretical formulation of white peoples, of European origin), reinforces the symbolic power (Bourdieu, 1991a, b) attributed to white men, when it reveals that the origin of theorems, the construction of mathematics as a field and as a human achievement is fundamentally a consequence of the work of these white men. There is no emphasis lying on any African peoples or African mathematics at all, despite very imposing works, such as the architecture of pyramids, for instance. This non-emphasis silently attributes greater power and valorization to European achievements and covers the real intention of the subjugating act, as if the subjugation was a spontaneous process, which “naturally” can be considered as unimportant, not interesting, something that took place unnoticedly, and that has no value or awareness, that is, a “neutral” act. Confirming this, Powell (2002, p. 4) reveals: […] the mathematics presented in extant mathematical papyri from ancient Egypt most probably has preserved the mathematical ideas of an African elite. Nevertheless, mainstream, Eurocentric historians of mathematics have largely discounted these ideas. […] the importance of Africa’s contribution to mathematics and the central role of that contribution to the mathematics studied in schools have not received the attention and understanding that befit them. As an example, documentary evidence of insightful and critical algebraic ideas developed in ancient Egypt exists, but little of this information has been made available to students studying mathematics, at any level.

What is recognized is that the enormous contributions of non-European development of mathematics have not been credited as deserved. The Arabic numeral system, historically written as the Hindu-Arabic numeral system, was carried into Europe by Muslims/Arabs. It is notable and it is recognized that algebra and trigonometry (which were studied by Arabs) were fundamentally developed by Hindu mathematicians and astronomers. But the empowerment of the skin color of these mathematicians is not valued as it should be in math classes. The fact that the mathematics curriculum neglects black and brown peoples’ achievements leads us to infer that mathematics is perceived by all students (blacks, whites, etc.), subjectively, as a legitimate act and cognitive product exclusively done by white. Furthermore, “mathematics” is, in many cases, empirically identified as a “difficult subject,” “made for a few ones” and “intended to be understood only by the intelligent ones.” This increases the symbolic power and the discrepancies it provokes even more (Bourdieu, 1991a, b), fostering ideological believes about

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mathematics itself and about the intrinsic logic of subtracting any black culture from deserved evaluative positions. Corroborating this, Kivel (2011, p.282) states: Our curricula also omit the history of white colonialism as colonialism, and they don’t address racism and other forms of exploitation. People of color are marginally represented as token individuals who achieved great things despite adversity rather than as members of communities of resistance. The enormous contributions people of color have made to our society are simply not mentioned. For example, Arab contributions to mathematics, astronomy, geology, mineralogy, botany, and natural history are seldom attributed to them. The Arabic numbering system, which replaced the cumbersome and limited Roman numeral system— along with trigonometry and algebra, which serve as cornerstones of modern mathematics— were all contributions from Muslim societies. As a result, young people of color do not see themselves at the center of history and culture. They do not see themselves as active participants in creating this society.

The fact that young people of color very currently do not consider themselves as an agent of the historical and cultural process, due to the non-presentation of information about black culture in school and other places like media, mainly due to the absence of this information from the common vocabulary, allows us to affirm that not feeling part is intrinsic to the idea of structural racism. Structural racism is considered by Almeida (2021) as a sort of racism transcending the scope of individual action, which does not require the intention of manifestation and allows legal responsibility not to materialize, although ethical and political responsibility is not excluded. Thus, racialized subjects are conceived as members of the social system surrounded by structural racism, so that the dimension of power stands out in terms of identifying one group over the other. Notwithstanding, we consider that structural racism manifests itself through a habitus that, according to Bourdieu (1991b, p.54): […] produces individual and collective practices - more history - in accordance with the schemes generated by history. It ensures the active presence of past experiences, which, deposited in each organism in the form of schemes of perception, thought and action, tend to guarantee the ‘correctness’ of practices and their constancy over time, more reliably than all formal rules and explicit norms.

Rephrasing this idea, once we assume habitus exists and is responsible for producing and/or reproducing the practices of an individual and their group or groups, everyone in these groups would be sharing the same premises and values on which they produce and/or reproduce these practices and their ways of being. In this sense, the intention or non-intention to practice or not to practice a racist action is directly linked not only to the agent’s subjective world but also to the racial structure of his temporality/spatiality, and what results from the practice of an agent will be the product of the complex operation that considers in advance the values of the groups in which the agents belong (Lima, 2019). Nevertheless, racism is hereby understood as a systematic social-ideological apparatus that discriminates, having race as a parameter, and its manifestation takes place through practices (conscious or unconscious) that result in disadvantages or privileges to each of the antagonistic groups, likewise to the individuals within these

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groups, who often happen to be stigmatized or flattered on the cause of the race, in which they are classified (Almeida, 2021). Thus, according to Kivel (2011, p. 19): Racism is based on the concept of whiteness - a powerful fiction enforced by power and violence. Whiteness is a constantly shifting boundary separating those who are entitled to have certain privileges from those whose exploitation and vulnerability to violence is justified by their not being white.

The race, a modern phenomenon in the mid-sixteenth century, gains meaning in the mercantile expansion, which later transforms the European into the “universal man” and which, under the contribution of the Enlightenment, materializes the conditions of comparison and classification of the most different human groups, under criteria mostly conditioned to physical and cultural characteristics. Whiteness becomes one of the criteria for distinguishing what is civilized from savage, which would later be called civilized or primitive (Almeida, 2021). In addition, the ideological perspective of some philosophers reinforces somehow this approach, for example, the considerations made by the philosopher Hegel about Africans, who are described as “without history, bestial, and wrapped in ferocity and superstition.” References to “bestiality” and “ferocity” demonstrate the trend to depose humanity from black people quite common at the colonial time, by associating them (including their physical characteristics) and their cultures with animals or even insects. The science made in the universities then assigned a very reliable tonic to racism and, therefore, to its process of dehumanization that preceded discriminatory practices or genocides then and until this day (Almeida, 2021, p.28–29). The embargo on dehumanization starts from the religious domain, and there was a definition of the body based on the idea that the soul would be essential in the legitimation and qualification of being a human. Thus, religion, in connivance with the political sphere of the time, invents the criteria that define which group would be the holder of superiority. The invention of the black body or the animalized, objectified body contributes to legitimizing an economic project that assumed the human workforce. The religious doctrine only corroborated this idea, supporting it with the production of legitimation arguments (Dumas, 2019). Nevertheless, the sciences also served to support the explanation of dehumanization, according to the classification process by race, that is, white skin and tropical climate, according to biology and geography, would favor the emergence of so-called immoral behaviors, of violent and lascivious nature, as well as the identification of low intelligence. So, the closer to nature, the more primitive and the less civilized (Almeida, 2021). When examining the racist internal structure of mathematics education, it is necessary to discover how we can educate through mathematics, using mathematics to understand what racism is, how it was disseminated, for what reasons, and with what interests and to be socially responsible as a proposal and as a way of being, thinking, and existing that does not exclude, oppress, and dehumanize anyone. Perhaps, the prevailing force of what we currently live with digital technologies (DT) can be a fruitful path. If we consider the role of DT in cases such as George Floyd (BBC NEWS, 2020), for example, we assume that there are possibilities for

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change and articulation through communication. That is, although the world is in a process of continuous technological advancement, it still struggles with issues of citizenship, a subjective condition for those who, as a member of a State, should be assured of constant enjoyment of a defined right set, able to allow him to participate in political life. However, there is still evidence of the absence of social and political conditions for this, particularly in cases arising from discrimination/prejudice, as was the case of the American George Floyd, who was murdered in a typically racist act. In this sense, Floyd’s case mobilized the world in terms of protests against racism, precisely potentiated by the existence of the internet and all the technological apparatus that sustains it. For those reasons, we consider that highlighting the possibilities that are supported by the DT, in relation to social responsibility in terms of mathematics education, is one of the paths we wish to follow.

19.3 Digital Technologies and Racism: What Does Mathematics Education Have to Do with It? Digital technologies have long been studied in the field of education and, in particular, mathematics education, bringing the potential of the educational experience with these resources. According to Rosa (2020, p. 3): The evolution of the digital domain, in the form of the computer network, has been appropriated by educators, and from this, the research about the possibilities of digital technologies (DT) brings to Education in Brazil and worldwide (de Oliveira, 2002; Kenski, 2003; Laurillard, 2008; Mansur, 2001; Underwood, 2009, among others) and has been conducted for decades. Specifically, in mathematics education, many studies point to the prominent potentialities of DT, inserting cyberspace in this context (Bairral, 2002, 2004; Bicudo & Rosa, 2015; Borba, 2004; Borba & Villarreal, 2005; Burton, 2009; Chronaki & Christiansen, 2005; Simmons, Jones Jr, & Silver, 2004; Zullato, 2007). Cyberspace can enhance the construction of online worlds and identities (Rosa, 2008; Rosa & Lerman, 2011; Rosa & Maltempi, 2006), as well as enabling the creation of a differentiated time/space for communication, interaction (Bicudo, 2018; Castells, 2003, 2005; Lévy, 2000) and, consequently, education (Hoyos, 2012; Tallent-Runnels et al., 2006).

Thus, these studies represent a wide range of research, which explore, in the field of mathematics education, issues concerning mathematics, the teaching, and learning of mathematics, as well as the training of mathematics teachers, in face-to-face and online modality. These studies in educational terms can open up possibilities for discussing racism, but they do not effectively do so. In this sense, we want to draw attention to the large gap that exists regarding research on the potential of DT as resources that can corroborate the understanding of social responsibility in the face of racism and also in mathematics classes. For example, society worldwide has faced a pandemic (Covid-19), and, in the meantime, we believe the pandemic brought to light the need for education as a foundation for raising awareness of the social responsibility of each one about the “whole” and the indispensability of a political stance, which is consistent with the common good. Assuming such

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responsibility as a math educator may allow one to understand in advance that “Trying to solve math problems in an over-dwelled hovel in a slum is very different than doing so in a spacious, luxurious apartment with a veranda” (Borba, 2021, our translation). From this perspective, we assume the term “responsibility” as described in the Abbagnano dictionary of philosophy (2007, p.855, my translation8), that is, “Possibility of predicting the effects of one’s own behavior and of correcting it based on such prediction” and, respectively, its adjective, that is, the term “social” as “That which belongs to society or has in view its structures or conditions” (Abbagnano, 2007, p.912, my translation9). Thus, the possibility of predicting the effects of their behavior in relation to society, in this case, in relation to racism, in view of their structures or conditions, and correcting them is what we seek in educational terms, specifically, mathematical educational ones. However, the need for social responsibility does not arise with the pandemic but is only emphasized by it. Part of society has been questioning itself for some time in relation to this understanding/constitution of social responsibility, even before the pandemic. However, now some questions stand out: what is the responsibility of mathematics education regarding the education of a group of students, belonging to a postcolonial society based on the process of (im)position of some bodies on having access or success in important spaces (depending on whether they are white or black bodies)? What responsibility do we have/assume in mathematics education in relation to structural racism (also evidenced during the pandemic)? From this perspective, as already stated, we assume mathematics education as the act of educating (oneself) mathematically or educating (oneself) through mathematics (Rosa, 2008), which neither suppresses nor displaces the subjects involved in this act/process. Educators, teachers, students, and others involved in this act/ process make mathematics education, act in relation to mathematics education, and become mathematics education. Thus, they need to question themselves about the social responsibility of mathematics education, that is, their own social responsibility. In this sense, everyone (me, you, the teacher, the researcher in mathematics education, whoever reads this chapter, etc) is part of this. We, as mathematics teachers, need to perceive this responsibility as the primacy of knowledge and articulate educational possibilities that contribute to this understanding/constitution of social responsibility in the mathematics classroom, taking mathematics as a contribution and digital technologies as a means of enhancing this understanding/constitution. The DT participation in this process is not limited to the use of them like auxiliary objects merely (which would be the appliance of a resource only for fulfilling instructions, a request or habits, with few or noncritical reflection on what is being done), but is understood like the experience with DT that is translated as perception, feeling, reflection, thinking, etc. On the contrary, the participation of DT becomes  “Possibilidade de prever os efeitos do próprio comportamento e de corrigi-lo com base em tal previsão.” 9  “Que pertence à sociedade ou tem em vista suas estruturas ou condições. Neste sentido, fala-se em ‘ação S.’, ‘movimento S.’, ‘questão S.’. etc.”. 8

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an articulating act under an intentionality which conceives the technological resource as a participant in the constitution of knowledge. This means that we constitute knowledge with the world, with the digital technologies that are in the world, and not about the world, alone, so that these technologies simply help us to think about something (Rosa, 2008, 2018). In this case, for example, we moved from the evaluation of the Internet as a mere apparatus, as a communication technology, to the understanding of digitality as a technique, technology, and process of modern life; in other words, we understand the internet as a participant in a digitally mediated society. That is, we understand the internet as a capital, within a capitalist regime that seeks profit, but, more than that, it also becomes a symbolic capital and needs to be critically understood as able to potentialize stigmas or privileges, as well as interests and objectives of those who rule any hegemony in question, depending on its conduction (e.g., skin color). This focus places the internet at the heart of society’s digital transformations and also links it directly to the domain of the sociology of race, ethnicity, and racism. We say this because there is network capital that shapes a global racial hierarchy varying according to spatial geographies and the privatization of public and economic life. Internet technologies are central to the political economy of race and racism, as these technologies nowadays are at the base of politics and the concept of the capital (as we currently experience capitalism). Although we realize that digital transformation marks race and racism, transformation movements often leveraged colorblind racism, be whited racial projects, white racial frames, and implicit prejudice, that is, among other factors, the implicit aesthetic promoted many kinds of “white business” (business conducted under the will, desire, and perspective of white men). On the contrary, it would suffice to say that each one is important and none is perfect, once there are many prejudicing acts that happen with the internet, although there are many “important people” that use it for good things too. Indeed, the study of race and racism in the digital society must theorize network scale, obfuscation logics, and predatory inclusion mechanisms (McMillan Cottom, 2020). Or even, it should focus its efforts on raising awareness of diversity and valuing it. For us, then, it is important focusing on diversity. So, in this chapter, our movement of understanding/constitution of social responsibility in mathematics education with digital technologies is in line with what Rosa (2022) proposes in his research. The author investigated how the process of understanding/constituting the social responsibility of mathematics teachers in cybereducation has shown itself through the analysis of cinematographic products. The perspective is linked to the structural racism that inhabits our reality, including the educational aspects. In this sense, based on the concept of cybereducation with mathematics teachers (defined as education seen under different dimensions and which assumes the work with DT from the perspective of being with, thinking with, and knowing how to do with DT), Rosa (2022) analyzed a participant of the subject/extension course “Macro/Micro Exclusions/Inclusions in Mathematics Education with Digital Technologies” held in 2021 in ERE mode (emergency remote education) at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Specifically, analyzing one teacher from a group, Rosa (2022) understands that DT, in this case, cinematographic products, enhanced the

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understanding/constitution of the social responsibility of a mathematics teacher. The teacher was being-with-the-movie, consequently, with the people represented on the movie when watched and analyzed a specific film about racism. The teacher lived the experiences of the characters’ lives, and, in this way, the understanding of the “ubuntu” philosophy happened, without dichotomizing, in the sense of not conceiving the existence of a being independent of the other but of a “being” that thinks, feels, and experiences with others and with the world. This bridge projected among mathematics education, digital technologies, and structural racism places us in the understanding/constitution of social responsibility, which appropriates the experience with DT in order to sustain itself in the ways of being, thinking, and knowing how to do it. It is also situated in opposition to racism through a mathematical foundation and through the support of technological resources. So that allows us to go further, seeking mathematics that can favor this very understanding/constitution. Before it, we need to discuss one of the theories that are linked to the way in which we can overcome racism is the African philosophy of Ubuntu.

19.4 Ubuntu Philosophy and Mathematics Education: Possible Interconnections We envision a conception of the world, that is, a philosophy that, in our view, breaks with the Eurocentric and colonial idea of individuality as a primer thing and necessary to win in life and meritocracy as well. We bring up the Ubuntu philosophy, which becomes an ethical and pedagogical stance that evokes the idea of “being,” in order to launch itself into existence even before materializing it, however, already launching itself into this materiality: there is a movement directed to people (each one with their individuality in direction to others) and the relationships between them. Each one becomes a be-ing-becoming (Ramose, 2002) marked by uncertainty once they are anchored in the search for understanding the cosmos in a constant struggle for harmony. This cosmic harmony encompasses politics, religion, and law, and those spheres are, by their turn, based on experience and the concept of this very harmony. According to Noguera (2012, p.147, my translation10): Undoubtedly, the idea of ubuntu became widely known through free software for computers, characterized mainly by the proposal of offering an operating system that could easily be used by anyone. This essay is not about that; but, of |Ubuntu as a way of life: a possibility to exist together with other people in a non-egoistic way, an antiracist and polycentric community existence.

 “Sem dúvida, a ideia de ubuntu ficou amplamente conhecida através do software livre para computadores, caracterizado principalmente pela proposta de oferecer um sistema operacional que possa ser utilizado facilmente por qualquer pessoa. Este ensaio não trata disso; mas, de ubuntu como uma maneira de viver, uma possibilidade de existir junto com outras pessoas de forma não egoísta, uma existência comunitária antirracista e policêntrica.” 10

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In the same way, our research, even encompassing digital technologies, does not deal specifically with free software with that name, but the philosophy that portrays a way of living, a possibility of existing, be-ing-becoming without racism, seeking to get rid of any forms of discrimination, prejudice and/or selfishness, as well as perspectives based on a single way of being, of showing oneself, in unique and absolute terms. This is the perception of mathematics education that we believe teachers need to assume, discuss, and enact in their classes and perhaps make their students understand and apprehend it. In our view, it is also linked to the abdication of an exclusive “mathematics,” a single “mathematics,” finished, disciplinary, as well as a single way of seeing the world and others (a Eurocentric view, which takes as an adequate subject: “[ …] a being of civilization, [male-]heterosexual, Christian, a being of mind and reason” (Lugones, 2014, p. 936)). So, the classroom should be filled with many kinds of mathematics. Racism, for example, treats its origins through a Eurocentric vision that has historically signified any indigenous inhabitant out of Europe as nonhuman or less than a human. This construct contained one of the first epistemic acts of violence, for those peoples were and often still are perceived as beings absent from culture, living as beings closer to animals (Moraes & Biteti, 2019). Currently, it is notable that: […] racism is always structural, that is, it is an element that integrates the economic and political organization of society […] it provides meaning, logic and technology for the reproduction of forms of inequality and violence that shape the contemporary social life. (Almeida, 2021, p.20–21, author’s emphasis, my translation11)

On the other hand, reflecting on the Ubuntu philosophy becomes the action of assimilating the place of the decentralized “being” in the global context and seeking to abandon the legacies of a dominant discourse, understanding/constituting a knowledge that understands that people are not alone on the planet, much less that there are privileged societies in cognitive terms, due to coloniality. What constitutes Ubuntu philosophy is otherness, and thus is what: […] it constitutes my relationship with the other, in which the place of man is decentralized, removing him from the central place, demarcating his relationships with other beings. Thus, Ubuntu would not be a humanist ethics focused on man, but a way of being/with the other, with nature, with life. (Moraes & Biteti, 2019, p.138. my translation12)

Also, it is necessary to understand that: Ubuntu is a be-ing-becoming, a come-to-be-ing-becoming, which promotes a transformation in reality from its agency with others. In its structure, ubuntu is made in time, p­ romoting

 “[…] o racismo é sempre estrutural, ou seja, de que ele é um elemento que integra a organização econômica e política da sociedade […] fornece o sentido, a lógica e a tecnologia para a reprodução das formas de desigualdade e violência que moldam a vida social contemporânea.” 12  […] constitui minha relação com o outro, na qual se descentraliza o lugar do homem, o retirando do lugar central, demarcando suas relações com outros seres. Assim, o ubuntu não seria uma ética humanista concentrada no homem, mas um modo de ser/com o outro, com a natureza, com a vida (Moraes & Biteti, 2019, p.138). 11

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maintenance and transformations as measure of the do-doing, acting in constant continuity in its being in the world. (Moraes & Biteti, 2019, p.138, my translation13)

We hope that there will be a chance for a new mathematics class developed by teachers who recognize the other as themselves and who encourage this same recognition on the part of their students, in order to experience mathematics as a way of showing it, educating mathematically oneself and, mainly, educating oneself through mathematics (Rosa, 2008) in the face of situations of racism, for example, and in favor of recognizing and respecting diversity. Mathematically, it is important to have as a premise what Ngomane (2019, p.66). says: As human beings, we share our planet with 8 million different species, but we ourselves are pretty unique. With around 200 countries in the world – official number vary – and roughly 6,500 different spoken languages (and with an infinite number of cultural differences), what we all have in common is this: diversity.

Furthermore, according to Jojo (2018, p.256) “Ubuntu as a philosophy, is a way of thinking about what it means to be human, and how humans, are connected to each other or should behave toward others.” Even though we are different people, we have a responsibility to each other, with well-being, and if you are not well, I am not well either. I am not without you, I am not without us. The idea of empathy materializes, not only as putting oneself in someone else’s shoes but considering the other intrinsically linked to one’s own being. According to Gade (2012, p. 257): Reality in Ubuntu is informed by the power derived from embracing people’s cultural philosophy (Bopape, 1990). It is an aspect of the African people’s culture. Batswana, Bapedi, Basotho refers to this culture as ‘botho’, while the Nguni’s (Xhosa’s, Zulu’s, Ndebele’s; and Swazi groups refer to it as ‘Ubuntu’. For my convenience in this paper, I’ll use Ubuntu. It embraces concepts like: "Umntu ngumtu ngabantu" which is literally translated as: ‘a person is a person through other people’. This implies that it is through the support from other people that a person is able to achieve his/ her goals. This reality is therefore based on collaboration, togetherness, and working collectively, through which the best results can be achieved. When this philosophy is well explored and understood by a mathematics teacher, it culminates in the latter putting maximized effort to ensure that the classroom environment welcomes students’ errors and questions while it also promotes engagement with problems posed and boosts their reputation under general.

The adoption of the Ubuntu philosophy can permeate the mathematics class, if this class is understood/constituted through premises, such as social responsibility, respect for diversity, and the belonging of being in the world with others. So, Jojo (2018), for example, studied fifteen 8th grade math teachers from South Africa in order to understand how their classroom environments and practices were transformed through Ubuntu, in relation to teaching geometry. The study reveals that teachers have transformed their approach to different math topics to explore

 “O ubuntu é um ser-sendo, um vir-a-ser sendo, que promove uma transformação na realidade a partir de seu agenciamento com outrem. Em sua estrutura, o ubuntu se faz no tempo, promovendo manutenções e transformações na medida em que faz-fazendo, agindo em constante continuidade no seu estar no mundo.” 13

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diversity in their classrooms and bring each student inclusively to understand the meaning of interpreting geometric terms with their application through sharing and modified valuing by each student’s contribution. It is important to highlight here that the mathematical concepts to be developed, in this case, geometric, depart from the “universal mathematics,” European, white, and historically (only) Greek. This is not bad, on the contrary, if I am not without us, Africans are not without Europeans, and the Europeans shouldn’t be without Africans. In this way, they do not abdicate the knowledge produced historically, even if the official history does not actually portray the movements of temporality/spatiality that took place. The annihilation of knowledge or non-appropriation of it is not defended for us; it is defended by the recognition of the constitution of black, yellow, red, Latin, and indigenous knowledge, in order to conceive equity and nondiscrimination, non-exclusion, non-­ subordination, and non-coloniality (or better, decoloniality). Jojo (2018) argues about the different types of representations of the human activity of doing mathematics and states that these exist in our surroundings and should be explored for a meaningful understanding of geometry. In turn, Osibodu (2020) investigated whether and how young people in sub-­ Saharan Africa use mathematics in understanding social issues related to the African continent. With five young people from sub-Saharan Africa, over a semester, the author of this research developed her study. She took as a theoretical reference the decolonial theory from an African perspective, which, according to the author, encompasses decolonial perspective structures, such as the Ubuntu philosophy that decenters power. Osibodu’s study (2020) did not focus on learning new mathematics; rather, it sought to investigate what knowledge young people draw on in their exploration of social issues. As a result, the research highlights the focus on sub-­ Saharan youth’s need to reread and rewrite their African world with and without mathematics. To encompass these results, young people were invested in rewriting narratives about the African continent, raising African indigenous knowledge. The act of rewriting has led to epistemic freedom and cognitive justice – an essential component of social justice – that corrects the loss of indigenous African knowledge. Despite this, there was still tension in recognizing and accepting indigenous African forms of knowledge, along with the belief that mathematics taught at their school was quite neutral. The traces of coloniality were manifested in Osibodu’s survey (2020), and one of the phrases expressed by one of the participants was “wherever you see a right angle, it means a white man has been there” (p. 56), or, that is, this participant’s mathematical perception of his space made him affirm this and understand the mathematics produced by his own people, because all houses, for example, were built for his people in circular forms. In this case, for us, it is a clear example of what we call ethnomathematics. According to D’Ambrosio (2001) apud Powell (2002, p. 3-4): Ethnomathematics encompasses in this reflection on decolonialization and in the search for real possibilities of access for the subaltern, for the marginalized e for the excluded. The most promising strategy for education, in societies that are in transition from subordination to autonomy, is to reestablish the dignity of its individuals, recognizing and respecting their

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roots. To recognize and respect the roots of an individual does not mean to ignore and reject the roots of the other, but, in a process of synthesis, to reinforce one’s own roots. (p. 42, author’s translation)

Thus, our reflection recognizes different mathematical production ways. We do not want to substitute the Eurocentric mathematics for others. Notwithstanding, we aim to produce reflections about ethnomathematics and to relate the way of understanding the correlations between possible mathematics and the concept of Ubuntu, because, as Jojo (2018) declares: Ubuntu is a unifying concept within South African people culture and thus deserves prominence in the curriculum in all respects. When teachers demonstrate the understanding of the historical development of mathematics in various social and cultural contexts both in urban and rural settings, students will not feel threatened and will exercise their both their minds and confidence in the classroom. Through Ubuntu, the teachers worked as collective humans with their students, restored their self-worth, and their ways of thinking from hegemonic structures, and facilitated their ability to articulate what they do and think about in order to provide a foundation for their productive individual participation in the classroom. I will also borrow from the Bapedi’ expression that talks to cooperation and solidarity attributes of Ubuntu when they say, "Tau tsa hloka seboka di fenywa ke nare e hlotsa". Literally explained this means that even a limping buffalo can beat lions without unity. Figuratively, this implies that unity is strength or simple tasks may remain impossible unless there is cooperation. In mathematics classrooms an environment of social organization, cooperation, communication; sharing of ideas; and solidarity where students are free to express themselves without fear of belittling is necessary to improve their performance and bring them into better understanding of the different concepts. In that environment their critical thinking skills are enabled, and they learn to ask the ‘why’ and ‘how come’ questions. (p.259–260)

With that, we started to discuss an antiracist mathematical activity with DT, which under our interpretation brings significant aspects of the Ubuntu philosophy weaving the ways of be-ing-becoming with the other, with the we, and with the mathematical reasoning. This weaving leads us to consider that the student may perceive diversity and assimilate the humanization of this diversity.

19.5 An Antiracist Mathematical Activity with DT The antiracist mathematical activity with DT that we present in this chapter was inspired by the photographic exhibition Humanae carried out by Angélica Dass. According to the exhibition website, Dass (2022) reveals that: Humanæ is a photographic work in progress by artist Angélica Dass, an unusually direct reflection on the color of the skin, attempting to document humanity’s true colors rather than the untrue labels “white”, “red”, “black” and “yellow” associated with race. It’s a project in constant evolution seeking to demonstrate that what defines the human being is its inescapably uniqueness and, therefore, its diversity. The background for each portrait is tinted with a color tone identical to a sample of 11 x 11 pixels taken from the nose of the subject and matched with the industrial pallet Pantone®, which, in its neutrality, calls into question the contradictions and stereotypes related to the race issue. More than just faces

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and colors in the project there are almost 4,000 volunteers, with portraits made in 20 different countries and 36 different cities around the world, thanks to the support of cultural institutions, political subjects, governmental organizations and non-governmental organizations. The direct and personal dialogue with the public and the absolute spontaneity of participation are fundamental values of the project and connote it with a strong vein of activism. The project does not select participants and there is no date set for its completion. From someone included in the Forbes list, to refugees who crossed the Mediterranean Sea by boat, or students both in Switzerland and the favelas in Rio de Janeiro. At the UNESCO Headquarters, or at a shelter. All kinds of beliefs, gender identities or physical impairments, a newborn or terminally ill, all together build Humanae. All of us, without labels.

Through the Humanae project, we observed the possibilities that the diversity discussed in the project itself could list and favor the understanding/constitution of social responsibility in the face of racism, precisely, understanding the constitution of the skin color of each individual without labels and, at the same time, mathematically common to all. In this perspective, we investigated a color recognition application (from now on “app”), and among those found in the gallery of applications for Android and IOS systems, we chose the app called “Identificação de Cor” (color identification) once it proved to be user-available with an easy handling interface. In Fig. 19.1, we can see the app’s interface: Initially, we have the key “Bloquear Anúncios” (block ads), then “Abrir Ficheiro” (open file), “Identificação em tempo real” (real-time identification), “Lista de cores” (color list), and “Criador de cor” (color creator). Our objective with this app (or other ones that work in the same way) is to be able to proceed like Angélica Dass in Fig. 19.1  “Identicação de cor” app interface

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her photographic work Humanae and, through that, bring mathematics as a basis for understanding colors. In other words, with this app, we want to be able to photograph skin tones, using photos of different people’s nose tips (in our case, students’ noses), in order to obtain the digital color recognized by the technological resource. The app operates by targeting a single pixel right in the middle of the photo and revealing instantaneously values between 0 and 255 of the basic hues (red, green, and blue) composed of the color that was recognized. Our antiracist mathematical activity with DT: First moment, exposition debate  the activity can begin with the presentation of Dass’ work, generating a debate about the exhibition and mentioning that there is a clear question of percentages (mathematics) present in the color of each one’s skin. Second moment, invitation  the teacher performs an invitation to do the same that Dass did but in the classroom. This is “would the class agree to divide into a group and carry out this color identification?” Attention: regarding the students who are not willing to participate, the teacher can asking them the reason of participation refuse. Then, whether the teacher’s awareness-raising argument is not convincing, or the student’s justification is plausible, the teacher must accommodate these students in the groups as a technical reporter, that is, these students will not stop investigating and thinking together, although they will only not participate in the photography phase. Third moment, app’s download  regarding the students participating in the photography phase, it is necessary to form groups, check if at least one student has a smartphone, and request them to download the “Identificação de Cor” app (or another app that works in the same way). Fourth moment, formation of the groups  with the app installed, the activity begins with the formation of groups. A random formation of the groups is recommended, so that racially mixed groups emerge. The group size and selection method depend on the teacher’s perception and the size of the class, and it would be relevant to note how many girls, boys, blacks, whites, and different stereotypes existing in the classroom are compounding each group. Fifth moment, confirmation of participation and ethical clarifications  the teacher explains the activity and asks if anyone feels uncomfortable taking a photo of the tip of their noses and the teacher precisely clarifies that not the image of the person’s face will ever be collected. The focus of the activity will be exclusively on the color of the nose, of the nose tip. Sixth moment, request for the activity report and explanation of how to do this report  it is necessary to explain to the group that there will be a report on the research to be delivered and to reveal procedures to do that ((1) creation of pseudonyms; (2) inserting the photos taken by cellphones; (3) using the app to measure the quantitative of red, green, and blue from each identified color; (4) showing the calculation of percentages of red, green, and blue from each identified color; (5) discussing the questions presented by the teacher (a, b, c…l)). It is important that

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the teacher reads all activities (until the 13th moment) and uses the app before taking it to the classroom. Seventh moment, creation of pseudonyms  all participants/students will create pseudonyms to appear in the report, that is, each color will be identified by a pseudonym and not by the name of the subject involved. Eighth moment, explanation of the reason for the choice of pseudonym  also, it would be important to discuss why each pseudonym was chosen. As a plus, it would be interesting if the pseudonyms they chose were currently names of popular people, who took a stand against racism at some point in history. Ninth moment, production of pictures  the students take a photo of the tip of the nose of their classmates and capture the cell phone screen, so that the image composes the report. This photo must be taken using the “Identificação de Cor” app in the “Identificação Em tempo real” mode, as shown in Fig. 19.2. Before capturing the smartphone screen, each student needs to click on “Identificar” (identify), so that the screen capture already brings the identified colors, namely: “Cor atual” (current color), “Cor semelhante com nome” (similar color with name) and Palette RAL. Figure 19.3 provides an example of personal color identification.

Fig. 19.2 “Identificação em tempo real” (real-time identification)

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Fig. 19.3  “Cor atual” (actual color), “Cor semelhante com nome” (similar color with name) and Palette RAL

Tenth moment, internet research about the RGB color system  the teacher asks the group to search about the RGB color system on the internet. Eleventh moment, reflection on different color systems  in order to guide the search, confront the group with these questions: what does each letter (R, G, and B) mean? What are the other systems? What are the differences between the systems? What is the number of levels in the RGB system? The answers are shown in the report. Twelfth moment, reproduce the color identified  the teacher asks the students that they reproduce the color identified by the app (identification resource), in the color creator resource, in order to learn to numerically configure a color using the RGB system. So, the teacher conducts the group report through the individual analysis of the participants. Initially, get the “Cor atual” (current color) of each participant and reproduce the color in the mode “Criador de cor” (color creator) of the app. As it is shown in Fig. 19.4, we can reproduce generated color in the app: Thirteenth moment, reflection on the process through questions  from the generation of photos and color recognition of all the participants of the groups, questions need to be launched. We remind the teacher that the questions presented here are just suggestions, each teacher is free to change them and add others, in a way that satisfies their reality. However, we call attention to the fact that mathematical discussion is a way of understanding diversity and equity, from the Ubuntu perspective. Tutu (2004) notes:

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Fig. 19.4  “Criador de cor” (color creator)

I am human because I belong. I participate, I share”. A person with Ubuntu is open and available to others, affirming of others, does not feel threatened that others are able and good, for he or she belongs in a greater whole and is diminished when others are humiliated or diminished, when others are tortured or oppressed, or treated as if they were less than who they are. (p. 31)

By allowing the students to understand that there is a hint of red and/or green and/or blue in everyone’s skin color, it will be possible to realize that the chromatic spectrum found in a rainbow represents much more than the pettiness of our imposed binarity of black and white. Thus, it is important to question and discuss mathematically: (a) How much red does each photo have in its pigmentation? What is the percentage of red in relation to the total (100%) of the three colors? (b) How much green does each photo have in its pigmentation? What is the percentage of green in relation to the total (100%) of the three colors? (c) How much blue does each photo have in its pigmentation? What is the percentage of blue in relation to the total (100%) of the three colors? (d) What do these percentages represent? What can we conclude individually? (e) If we compare the participants of the group, what can we say about the percentage of red? What can we say about the percentage of green? What about the percentage of blue? (f) What can we say in terms common to all participants in the group?

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(g) Could any identified color exist without the three elements (RGB)? What does this explain to us? (h) Did any participant in the group have their RGB value identified as (0,0,0)? Likewise, did any participant in the group have their RGB value identified as (255,255,255)? What percentage of participants met these criteria? What do you have to say about that percentage? (i) Also, have you noticed that the colors displayed on the screen are not exact, and they depend on the brightness and contrast settings and may vary from one screen to another in relation to the camera and device? What does this reveal in relation to any color study? (j) Can we say that someone is currently white or black? (k) Does having more or less red in skin color pigmentation change what a person is? Likewise green or blue? (l) Why are there people who suffer and are still killed today because of their skin color? What do you think about this? What mathematical explanations would you give about skin color that would help to understand what people may be like in terms of skin color? What actions would you like to take regarding racism? This would be an activity in which the discussion of percentage, proportion, and interval would be intertwined with the discussion of diversity and understanding/constitution of social responsibility in relation to racism. Then, we move on to our considerations, which already carry out the analysis of the activity in the face of the Ubuntu philosophy and the perspective of social responsibility.

19.6 Antiracist Mathematical Educational Movements: Be-ing-Becoming Antiracist “How to discuss racism in a mathematics class with digital technologies in a way that mathematical concepts support the discussion?” was the research question announced in this chapter. To seek to answer it, we drew a line of discussion about the historicity of a “white mathematics,” which is taken as “neutral,” sometimes under neutrality attributed to it as if it were an “entity” without any relation to humanity. Also, on the other hand, the “white mathematics” is evidenced under a single bias, that is, that of univocal production and undervalue judgment, with a great symbolic power, on the part of an exclusively white group. In the meantime, we discussed the structural racism that encompasses this way of thinking about mathematics itself. These “mathematics” were mostly consolidated by white men and by the intelligent people in the core of Enlightenment Europe, as if African mathematical production did not ever exist and as if black people were not intelligent, dehumanizing them, although it was already known back then that some mathematics contents had been hijacked from African ancient people (Powell, 2002).

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In contrast to this structural racist movement, internal to the scientific field and which extends to the field of common sense, through a habitus concerning the dominant group, we are seeking to understand/constitute social responsibility in the face of racism, discussing it in an educational space of mathematics with digital technologies. We seek not only to value mathematics but also to value the philosophy that emerges from other places, Ubuntu, which manifests itself in a convergent way with the issues raised by decoloniality and ethnomathematics. Thus, we also apprehend “white mathematics” because it has its value and because we want dialogue. We understand the role of “we” as a key piece, as a tree trunk that sustains the fruitful possibility of philosophy itself, and we advance with the potential for the articulation of digital technologies for the debate of racism, for example. In this way, we created an antiracist mathematical activity with DT as a way of discussing racism in a math class with digital technologies. In other words, the activity lists the exploration of percentages as a means of thinking about skin color when in the 13th moment, which aims at the reflection, the questions “a,” “b,” “c,” and “d” request the calculation of the percentage of red, green, and blue that each individual has in the color identified in the tip of your nose, as a means of concluding that they all have red, green, and blue in their own color (questions “e” and “f”). This conclusion permeates the digital transformation with the “Identificação de Cor” app and marks race and racism with different issues in terms of reflective intent. There is a movement of transformation of colorblind racism, because it is desired to highlight the difference as a focus in this activity, but not with white racial frames and implicit prejudice, that is, among other factors, the implicit aesthetics that would promote white power. But as a source of understanding that everybody’s skin color is composed of red, green, and blue, however, each complexion has its individual nuances, and it has nothing of value over one another. Thus, there can be no perfection or supremacy, for all of us matter equally. However, the percentages of the same colors in the activity cause race and racism to be questioned in the digital society, which allows one to understand the logics of obfuscation and to be aware of the possible mechanisms of predatory inclusion. (McMillan Cottom, 2020)

In terms of the Ubuntu philosophy, the antiracist mathematical activity with DT allows the understanding of the colors of the group, class, community, population, and world as a way for each one to live, a possibility of existing together with other people in a non-egoistic way, as we all have red, green and blue, and in an antiracist and polycentric community existence (Noguera, 2012), because red or green or blue are not just present on one person. They are on everyone’s skin: we are altogether red and/or green and/or blue! This understanding is dealt with in the activity (questions “f” and “g”) and it goes further, since it highlights that racism is always structural, that is, it already brings the possibility of who will try to value possible “whites,” that is, the white color that would have the maximum levels of red, green, and blue or devalue the black color that would not have red, green, and blue pigment, raising questions about this (questions “h” and “j”). Questions that predict structural racism can emerge in the classroom itself, because it is an element that integrates the economic and political organization of society and it provides the

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meaning, logic, and technology for the reproduction of forms of inequality and violence that shape contemporary social life (Almeida, 2021, p.20–21). However, it is up to the teacher to be able to raise other questions if the idea of valuing white, as formed by maximum values of red, green, and blue (255, 255, 255) on the scale, and the devaluation of black, as formed by minimum values of the scale (0,0,0), happens. Questions must be linked to the validity of arguments. That is, if you value a white complexion, where can it currently be found? Who would be this truly white person? Would red 255, green 255, and blue 255 finally be matched? Do these white people really exist? (question “j”). Questions like these would serve to show each one, once again, that even if one wants to attribute “power,” “value” to the white color because it assumes the maximum values in the RGB scale, in fact the real write and black doesn’t appear in human beings. Which photo presented or presents these colors? In other words, the power relationship (attributed to one color and not to another) does not come from mathematics. This, on the contrary, shows that numerical differences do not express value or power, they simply express that the colors are different assuming percentages of colors (red, green, and blue) similar to all, once all have red, green, and blue in their pigmentation. In addition, the participation of DT in this process is not limited to the use for the use, but it also becomes an articulating act under an intention that conceives the technological resource, that is, the app “color identification” as a participant in the constitution of knowledge. This means that we acquire knowledge about the diversity of colors with the app; only with it we determine how much red, green, and blue there is in a color, to later calculate the respective percentages and proportionality of each one in the final composition. We constitute knowledge with the digital technologies that are in the world and not about the world alone, so that these technologies help us to think about something else (Rosa, 2008, 2018). In this case, the antiracist mathematical activity with DT even supplied questioning and varied use of the technology itself (question “i”), that is, critical thinking about the digital aspect also needs to be highlighted. However, issues involving the idea of equity make up the very awareness of social responsibility for those who suffer without having a real and just reason (questions “k” and”l”). In this perspective, Rosa (2022) sustains that DT enhance the understanding/constitution of the social responsibility of mathematics students who are involved when they being-with-the-App presenting his understood about the “Ubuntu” philosophy, without dichotomizing it. In this way, the author doesn’t conceive the existence of a being independent of the other, but of a “being” that thinks, acts and lives with others. Finally, we understand that there is a way to discuss racism in a mathematics class with digital technologies, for example, with the “Identificação de Cor” app or another similar, so that mathematical concepts such as percentage and proportionality of base colors that make up people’s colors support the discussion. That is, is there a difference? Is there a reason for the other to be discriminated against? Why are there people who suffer and are still killed these days because of their skin color? What do you think about this? What mathematical explanations would you give about skin color in order to help elucidate what people are like in terms of skin

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color? What actions would you like to take regarding racism (question “l”)? With this, we understand that it is high time to ask ourselves about it and take these questions to mathematics classes. Acknowledgments  The author thanks the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development – CNPq for the financial support (Process: 311858/2021-0) and Daniel Zanchet da Rosa for the translation and suggestions to our English version.

References Abbagnano, N. (2007). Dicionário de Filosofia. Martins Fontes. Arendt, H. (2002) O que é política? Tradução de Reinaldo Guarany. 3a ed. Bertrand Brasil. Battey, D., & Leyva, L. A. (2016). A Framework for Understanding Whiteness in Mathematics Education. Journal of Urban Mathematics Education, 9(2), 49–80. BBC NEWS. (2020). George Floyd: o que aconteceu antes da prisão e como foram seus últimos 30 minutos de vida. BBC. https://www.bbc.com/portuguese/internacional-­52868252#orb-­banner. Accessed 09 July 2020. Bicudo, M. A. V. (2003a). A formação do professor: um olhar fenomenológico. In: Maria Aparecida Viggiani Bicudo (Org.). Formação de Professores? EDUSC. Bicudo, M. A. V. (2003b). Tempo, tempo vivido e história. EDUSC. Borba, M. C. (2021). The future of mathematics education since COVID-19: Humans-with-media or humans-with-non-living-things. Educational Studies in Mathematics, 108, 385. https://doi. org/10.1007/s10649-­021-­10043-­2 Bourdieu, P. (1991a). Language and symbolic power. Translated by Gino Raymond and Matthew Adamson. Polity Press. Bourdieu, P. (1991b). The logic of practice. Translated by Richard Nice. Stanford University Press. Butler, J. (2019). Bodies that matter: On the discursive limits of sex. Routledge, 1993. Dass, (2022). Humanae – About the project. https://angelicadass.com/photography/humanae/ Accessed 09 July 2020. Davis, L. (2013). The disability studies reader. Taylor & Francis. de Almeida, S. L. (2021). Racismo Estrutural. Sueli Carneiro; Editora Jandaíra. Dumas, A. G. (2019). Corpo negro: uma conveniente construção conceitual. In XV Encontro de Estudos Multidisciplinares em Cultura, 2019, Salvador. Frankenstein, M. (1983). Critical Mathematics Education: An application of Paulo Freire’ epistemology. The Journal of Education, 165(4), 315–339. http://www.jstor.org/stable/42772808 Gade, C. B. N. (2012). What is Ubuntu? Different interpretations among South Africans of African Descent. South African Journal of Philosophy, 31(3), 484–503. Jojo, Z. (2018). Transforming mathematics classroom practice through Ubuntu for the improvement of geometry teaching. In R. Govender & K. Junqueira (Eds.), Proceedings of the 24th Annual National Congress of the Association for Mathematics Education of South Africa, Volume 1, 25–29 June 2018, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, Free State. Kivel, P. (2011). Uprooting racism: How white people can work for racial justice (3rd ed.). New Society. Lima, R. V. A. (2019). A sociologia bourdieusiana e a construção social do habitus negro. Praça – Revista Discente da Pós-Graduação em Sociologia da UFPE, 3(1), 1–16. Louro, G. L. (2021). Um corpo estranho: ensaios sobre sexualidade e teoria queer. 3ªed ver amo.; 3ª reimp. Belo Horizonte: Autêntica. Lugones, M. (2014). Rumo a um feminismo decolonial. Estudos Feministas, 22(3), 935–952.

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McMillan Cottom, T. (2020). Where platform capitalism and racial capitalism meet: The sociology of race and racism in the digital society. Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, 6(4), 441–449. https://doi.org/10.1177/2332649220949473 Moraes, M. J. D., & Biteti, M. (2019). Ontologia Ubuntu: Natureza ser-com Homem. In J.R. Mendes & B.J. Sylla (Eds.), Encontro Iberoamericano de Estudos do Antropoceno, 10. Universidade do Minho. pp.  131–146. http://ceps.ilch.uminho.pt/static/publications/eibea2019_atas.pdf. Accessed 08 July 2020. Ngomane, M. (2019). Everyday Ubuntu: Living better together, the African Way. Bantam Press. Noguera, R. (2012). Ubuntu como Modo de Existir: elementos gerais para uma ética afroperspectivista. Revista da ABPN, 3(6), 147–150. Osibodu, O.  O. (2020). Embodying Ubuntu, invoking Sankofa, and disrupting with Fela: A co-­ exploration of social issues and critical mathematics education with sub-Saharan African youth. Michigan State University. Powell, A. B. (2002). Ethnomathematics and the challenges of racism in mathematics education. In P. Valero & O. Skovsmose (Eds.), Proceedings of 3rd International Mathematics Education and Society Conference. Copenhagen. Centre for Research in Learning Mathematics, v. 1, pp. 15–29. Ramose, M.  B. (2002). A ética do ubuntu. Tradução Éder Carvalho Wen. In P.  H. Coetzee & A. P. J. Roux (Eds.), The African philosophy reader (pp. 324–330). Routledge. Rosa, M. (2008). A Construção de Identidades Online por meio do Role Playing Game: relações com o ensino e aprendizagem de matemática em um curso à distância. Tese Doutorado em Educação Matemática - UNESP, 2008. Disponível em: http://www.rc.unesp.br/gpimem/downloads/teses/rosa%20m%20doutadodo.pdf. Acesso em 20 June 2021. Rosa, M. (2018). Tessituras teórico-metodológicas em uma perspectiva investigativa na Educação Matemática: da construção da concepção de Cyberformação com professores de matemática a futuros horizontes. In A.M.P. de Oliveira & M.I.R. Ortigão (Org.), Abordagens teóricas e metodológicas nas pesquisas em educação matemática. 1ed. SBEM, 255–281. Rosa, M. (2020). Mathematics education in/with cyberspace and digital technologies: What has been scientifically produced about it? In M. A. V. Bicudo (Ed.), Constitution and production of mathematics in the cyberspace (pp. 3–15). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-­3-­030-­42242-­4_1 Rosa, M. (2022). Cyberformação com Professories de Matemática: discutindo a responsabilidade social sobre o racismo com o Cinema. Boletim GEPEM, 80, 25–60. https://doi.org/10.4322/ gepem.2022.043 Rosa, M & Bicudo, M. A. V. (2018). Focando a constituição do conhecimento matemático que se dá no trabalho pedagógico que desenvolve atividades com tecnologias digitais. In R.M. Paulo, I.C.  Firme & C.C.  Batista, Ser professor com tecnologias: sentidos e significados. Editora da UNESP. http://www.culturaacademica.com.br/catalogo/ser-­professor-­com-­tecnologias/. Accessed 20 June 2021. Rosa, M., & Caldeira, J. P. S. (2018). Conexões Matemáticas entre Professores em Cyberformação Mobile: como se mostram? Bolema, 32(62), 1068–1091. https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-­441 5v32n62al6 Rosa, M., & Lerman, S. (2011). Researching online mathematics education: Opening a space for virtual learner identities. Education Studies in Mathematics, 78(1), 69–90. Rosa, M., & Mussato, S. (2015). Atividade-matemática-com-tecnologias-digitais-e- contextos-­ culturais: investigando o design como processo de Cyberformação com professores de matemática. Jornal Internacional de Estudos em Educação Matemática, 8(4), 23–42. Shapiro, C. (2021). Remembering Desmond Tutu, Tireless Champion of Animals and Others. PETA – People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. https://www.peta.org/blog/remembering-­ desmond-­tutu/. Accessed 20 Feb 2022. Tutu, D. (2004). God has a dream: A vision of hope for our time. Doubleday.

Chapter 20

Philosophy, Rigor, and Axiomatics in Mathematics: Imposed or Intimately Related? Min Bahadur Shrestha

20.1 Introduction Ever since mathematics began being developed, mathematicians have seemed to be relatively unconcerned with philosophy, as reflected in a Socratic dialogue (Rényi, 2006) in which ancient Greek philosopher Socrates mentions that the leading mathematicians of Athens do not understand what their subject is about. Plato, being devoted to philosophy in general and to the philosophy of mathematics in particular, was motivated by Socrates. Plato’s contribution of Platonic thought about mathematics, or Platonism, has descended through the centuries as the basis of the philosophy of mathematics. The Greek concept of the deductive–axiomatic model that culminated in Euclid’s Elements was a paradigm of mathematical certainty until only recently. In Elements, Euclid developed a magnificent axiomatic and logical system that served as the sole model for establishing mathematical certainty until the end of the nineteenth century (Ernest, 1991: 1). Perhaps the most evident modern feature of Elements is the axiomatic method, which stands at the core of modern mathematics (Mueller, 1969). Along with axiomatics, rigor has been a major requirement in formal mathematics. Although the term rigor is usually associated with advanced mathematics, even in that domain it seems to be largely accepted without much discussion. Moreover, it seems to me that the concept of rigor is applied less prominently than the concept of axiomatics. Against that background, in this chapter I examine the terms rigor and axiomatic(s) in detail. The extent to which rigor and axiomatization should be achieved seems to depend mostly on how mathematics is viewed. By extension, how mathematics is viewed is a relatively philosophical question. In that light, this chapter seeks to examine the philosophical reflection on rigor and axiomatics in M. B. Shrestha (*) Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_20

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mathematics. To that end, I first review the concepts of rigor and the axiomatic method in mathematics. Although both concepts have largely been associated with Western mathematical traditions as their integral components, Hindu mathematical traditions, despite lacking formal axiomatic proof, have also contributed significantly to the development of mathematics. Thus, rigor and reasoning in the Hindu development of mathematics also warrant examination to understand the status of the axiomatic method in mathematics and its relationship with philosophy. To that purpose, the chapter is organized into four subsections—“Rigor in Mathematical Argumentation,” “The Axiomatic Method,” “Rigor and Reasoning in Traditional Hindu Mathematics,” and “Philosophical Reflection,” in that order— followed by a summary and conclusion. When appropriate, pedagogical concerns are also addressed to clarify the discussion from an educational point of view.

20.2 Rigor in Mathematical Argumentation While searching for the precise meaning of rigor as used in mathematical argumentation, I came across an article written by Philip Kitcher (1981) that addresses the concept of rigor in a rather conventional way. Kitcher (1981, 1) states that “central to the idea of rigorous reasoning is that it should contain no gaps, that it should proceed by means of elementary steps.” He argues that the argument in reasoning is rigorous when and only when the sequence of statements leads to the conclusion and every statement is either a premise or a statement obtainable from previous statements by means of elementary logical inference. In mathematical proofs, as a kind of argument required to convince readers of the truth of mathematics, the rigor in reasoning is aimed at establishing correct, consistent results. More recently, a wider basis of proof has been taken into consideration that includes not only a cognitive basis but also cultural and psychological bases (Joseph, 1994: 194). Nevertheless, writers of standard textbooks on mathematics seem to be primarily interested in the conventional mode, which has an exclusively cognitive basis. To illustrate how formal deductive proof employs rigor in mathematical derivation, the following example demonstrates how to prove that 1 + 1 = 2. In doing so, the example reveals how rigorous proof is based on assumptions of axioms and/or postulates, along with definitions, as well as logical rules of inference (Ernest, 1991: 4–6). What is immediately noticeable is that proof is needed to establish a set of rules in advance of stating definitions, axioms, and rules of logical inference. After that, the proof can be developed in 10 steps (Ernest, 1991: 5). The example raises the question of what rigor indicates and what advantages tediously providing such proof for the fundamental facts of arithmetic affords. From a pedagogical perspective, my experiences of teaching pre-service students seeking master’s of education degrees in mathematics have revealed the problem of convincing many students to recognize the value of and commit to providing such seemingly ridiculous rigor. As I see it, such rigor implies the development of consecutive steps without any lapses of reasoning in the formation of the argument. Alternatively, the sequence of the

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steps in the argument should be capable of connecting statements to form the integrity of the proof. However, the concept of rigor, like many other concepts, is a relative one and may depend on many factors. Although Paul Ernest (1991: 5) has developed 10 steps to show that 1 + 1 = 2, Reuben Hersh (1999: 254) has used only three steps to prove that 2 + 2 = 4, and that discrepancy indicates that rigor in proof also depends on the situation under consideration and other factors. Even so, the traditional view on ideal mathematical knowledge can explain why such rigor is needed; it maintains that by constructing rigorous proofs of known truths, mathematicians at all levels can improve their knowledge of those truths either by coming to know them a priori as certain or at least by making their knowledge more certain than it was before (Kitcher, 1981). Kitcher refers to that type of mathematical thinking as “deductivism,” which consists of two claims. On the one hand, it holds that all mathematical knowledge can be obtained by deduction from first principles and that such an approach is the optimal route to gaining mathematical knowledge because it is less vulnerable to empirical knowledge. Kitcher adds that though mathematicians can use deductive and/or axiomatic proof in mathematics, such proof lacks an epistemological basis, which deductivist theses attribute to first principles. A lack of an epistemological basis means that neither first principles nor their bases can be discerned as being true, and it is clear that so many such constraints are imposed in mathematics in developing deductive proofs. Interestingly enough, mathematical proofs have been useful in computer programming and formatting the power of mathematics in packages (Skovsmose, 2010). Although deductivists’ way of producing mathematics is generally not how mathematicians produce mathematics, the deductivist approach is nevertheless a natural way to unravel the network of interconnections between various facts and to exhibit the essential logical skeleton of the structure of mathematics (Courant & Robbins, 1941/1996: 216). The discovery of non-Euclidean geometry based on the logical consequences of Euclid’s fifth postulate laid a strong foundation for the development of deductive– axiomatic rigor in mathematics. Although the development of non-Euclidean geometry has been an ingenious reconstruction in mathematics, one that has broadened horizons in the field as well as in the philosophy of mathematics, it has been limited to the field of geometry as the twin brother of Euclidean geometry. The most important aspect of rigor in that context implies the strict logical consequences of Euclid’s fifth postulate and its two alternative postulates as being the postulates of non-Euclidean geometries. Moreover, whereas Euclid’s Elements defines basic geometric objects, including points and lines, David Hilbert’s work does not. Hilbert does not define line; on the contrary, he axiomatizes it by writing “Two distinct points determine a line.” Hilbert’s efficiency, as a modern geometer, lies in recognizing that a line, as such a simple geometric figure, cannot be defined satisfactorily, but it can be axiomatized. Rigor in mathematics seems to have become understood differently depending on the course of the development of different areas of mathematics. In the past 200 years, the development of analysis, as a constructive method in mathematics independent from deductivism, has been made rigorous by identifying and defining

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many concepts and thereby allowing more refined development. By contrast, in the name of generalization and formalization, constructively developed analysis has been situated within deductive structures as a means to formalize it and lend it rigor. Such a representation of mathematics has indeed become more robust and rigorous with the work of Nicolas Bourbaki, the collective pseudonym of some young formalist mathematicians in France most active in the mid-twentieth century; however, it also seems to have become detached from the position from which it was developed and from the purpose for which it was first used. For example, on the topic of rigor in mathematics, E. T. Bell (1934) made the following remark in his article: No mathematical purist can dispute that the place of rigor in mathematics is in mathematics, for this assertion is tautological, and therefore, according to Wittgenstein, it must be of the same stuff that pure mathematical truths are made (p. 600).

The statement clearly reveals that, for mathematical purists, the rigor of mathematics is inherent in mathematics and is made of the same core elements as mathematical truths. By extension, Bell seems unsatisfied with the development of rigor in mathematics textbooks for graduate students: The present plight of mathematical learning––instruction and research––in regard to the whole question of rigor is strangely reminiscent of Robert Browning’s beautiful but somewhat dumb little heroine Pippa in the dramatic poem Pippa Passes (p. 600). Thus, though as beautiful as a heroine in the field of poetry, rigor is not as beautiful in mathematics education. Similar to Bell, many scholars and mathematics educators, especially in the twentieth century, have shown concern with the difficulties of teaching and learning mathematics due to the excessive emphasis on formalism, which draws upon the axiomatic method as well as rigor. In response, Hans Freudenthal, in his contributions to make mathematics more educational, particularly in Mathematics as an Educational Task (1973), critically examined the use of mathematics for educational purposes. Meanwhile, intuitionists Richard Courant and Herbert Robbins, in their epoch-defining book What Is Mathematics? (1941/1996), sought to emphasize the intuitive and constructive nature of mathematics. Nevertheless, Jerome Bruner, a US learning theorist and well-known scholar, expressed anxiety over the frustrating situation in mathematics education bought about by an insistence on formalism. In his preface to Zoltan P. Dienes’s book An Experimental Study of Mathematical Learning (1964), Bruner remarks: I comment on the difference between Dr. Dienes and some of the others of us who have tried our hand at revising mathematical teaching. Perhaps it can be summed up by saying that Dr. Dienes is much more distrustful of “formalism” than some of the rest of us.

Such situation reveals that the more formal, rigorous development of mathematics has long been regarded as a hindrance to the development of mathematics education. Many students seem to have difficulties understanding the essence of rigor in mathematical arguments involved in proofs. It seems that rigor becomes especially confusing in proofs of common truths—for example, showing that 1 + 1 = 2. Nearly all students in my classes have been confused, if not perplexed, while trying to

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develop an understanding of that proof, and, even after being aided with prompts and hints, few have shown an understanding of its justification (Shrestha, 2019). In fact, Kitcher (1981) has even suggested testing the hypothesis that demanding rigorous proofs of known truths is just simply confusing. It has recently been suggested that proofs in mathematics, to be convincing arguments, need not only a cognitive basis but also cultural and psychological bases (Joseph, 1994: 194). Social constructivism, as the philosophy of mathematics (Ernest, 1991: 98), has particularly supported such novel interpretations of the genesis of mathematical knowledge. Beyond that, Imre Lakatos’s Proof and Refutation (1976), a common source for explaining the genesis of mathematical knowledge, shows how mathematics has developed into well-arranged forms marked by formalism and rigor. Through such lenses, answers to the questions “What is rigor?” and “How much rigor is needed in mathematics?” are not already fixed or given but the products of a dynamic discourse determined by the society in which mathematicians seek to show the purpose of the validity of mathematical knowledge. Because an axiomatic basis has played a starring role in the development of formal, rigorous mathematics, my next consideration is the axiomatic foundation of mathematics.

20.3 The Axiomatic Method Robert and Glenn James’s Mathematics Dictionary (1988) defines axioms in the context of mathematical systems as the basic propositions from which all other propositions can be derived. Axioms are independent, primitive statements in the sense that it is impossible to deduce one axiom from another. Euclid’s fifth postulate is a well-known example of an axiom, one that took mathematicians and geometers roughly two millennia to determine whether it was indeed a postulate or could be proved as a theorem. Only in the nineteenth century did they conclude that the fifth postulate was in fact a postulate independent of the other four and could not be proven using the others. Added to that, they discovered that, unlike the fifth postulate, the other postulates could be stated in ways leading to other systems of geometries (e.g., hyperbolic and elliptical). Thus, the fifth postulate is an outstanding demonstration of the independent role of axioms and postulates in mathematical structure. Because the conclusion of a proof of a theorem is a logical implication of the truth of the axioms, such models of deriving truth are termed axiomatic models, and both Euclid’s Elements and representative modern works such as Hilbert’s Grundlagen der Geometrie showcase statements postulated as starting points and everything else derived from them (Mueller, 1969). Ever since the development of mathematical theory, much has been written on the axiomatic method (Wilder, 1967). Perhaps most prominently, Bourbaki’s version of 1953, as quoted by Weintraub (1998) in his article, reflects that the axiomatic point of view in mathematics appears as a storehouse of abstract forms of the mathematical structures

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which happens without our knowledge that certain aspects of empirical reality fit themselves into these forms as if through a kind of preadaptation. The views of Bourbaki clearly maintain that the axiomatic basis of mathematical structures represents certain aspects of empirical reality. Such an interpretation essentially derives from a Platonic view of mathematics: that mathematical truths are the propagation of preexisting reality. Here is the version of Hilbert, a master of axiomatic mathematics in relation to the role of the axiomatic method in scientific thought and mathematics: I believe: anything at all that can be the object of scientific thought becomes dependent on the axiomatic method, and thereby indirectly on mathematics, as soon as it is ripe for the formation of a theory. By pushing ahead to ever deeper layers of axioms ... we also win ever-deeper insights into the essence of scientific thought itself, and we become ever more conscious of the unity of our knowledge. In the sign of the axiomatic method, mathematics is summoned to a leading role in science (Weintraub, 1998: 1844).

Thus, according to Hilbert, the axiomatic method is not merely a means to establish scientific reasoning but also to gain profound insights into scientific thought in the form of axiomatic thinking. Axiomatic method has also been used in social science, especially, in economics, in the assumption that the relationship between rigor and truth require an association of rigor with axiomatic development of economic theories since axiomatization was seen as the path to new scientific discovery (Weintraub, 1998:1845). The general form of the axiomatic method as used in sociology applies to a set of propositions summarizing current knowledge in a given field and for generating additional knowledge deductively (Coster & Leik, 1964). In that light, the axiomatic method can be viewed as a means to deduce deeper knowledge in Hilbert’s sense of the word. Wilder (1967) stresses the role of the axiomatic method in introducing increased abstraction. Wilder points out that Greek mathematics performed the role of providing foundation as well as consistency. But, Ian Mueller (1969) argues that the axiomatic method used in Euclid’s Elements differs from Hilbert’s modern axiomatics even though both begin by postulating statements and deriving everything else from those postulates. Whereas modern mathematics, including Hilbert geometry, has the formal–hypothetical character of modern axiomatics, ancient Greek mathematics was not a hypothetical science in the same sense. For the Greeks, mathematical assertions were true and of interest only because they were true, which explains why Euclidean axioms and common notions are taken as self-­ evident truths. Wilder’s position on the nature of ancient Greek mathematical assertions somewhat differs. He argues what Euclid and later mathematicians described was not a physical reality but a mental model of what their perception of physical reality had suggested. Thus, it did confront logical difficulties because the mathematical model and the logic used were derived from reality (Wilder, 1967: 124). Wilder divides the axiomatic method into three types according to the degree of formalization. In the first, called the “Euclidean” type, the primitive terms are not treated as undefined, and the model is described only in the sense of a mental model: a model of the perception of the physical model. The second type of axiomatic

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method, the “naïve axiomatic” type, is the one in which we are careful to list primitive terms (such as, definition, axiom/postulate) needed to develop arguments, but we list neither logical nor set- theoretic rules by which we shall abide (say, for example, when introducing Group in modern algebra text, definitions and postulates are stated, and then theorems are proved without listing logical rules). The second type of method is taken as the principal tool for modern research in all branches of mathematics, especially algebra, topology, and analysis. Wilder (1967: 126) continues: “The third type of axiomatics in which the logical apparatus not only enters the discussion, but is explicitly formalized, has provided one of the major tools in the foundational research.” Summarizing his views on the types of axiomatic methods, Wilder concludes that modern mathematics, despite its abstraction, increasingly resembles applied science and thus interprets the three types of methods as being at work in science in one form or another. However, Abraham Seidenberg (1975), a historian of mathematics, takes another view. He argues that though we have all been told since childhood that Euclid developed the axiomatic method and that conclusion seems amiss when Elements is viewed with modern hindsight (p. 263). Referring to Seidenberg’s (1975) article, Yehuda Rav (2008: 138), in his own article, mentions that Euclid’s Book I is not an axiomatic basis for the theorems but a theory of geometric construction for they serve to control the straightedge and compass construction. Unlike Wilder, Rav claims that it is fairly common for mathematicians to derive theorems from axioms by using valid rules of logic. However, he adds, problems arise from taking the view that ….. lacks actual evidence from the day-to-day proof of mathematicians, most of whom are not logicians and could hardly name any rule or axiom of logic, much less relate them to their proofing practices. Nevertheless, despite contrasting views that whether or not mathematics was already organized on the basis of explicit axioms, there is no question that deductive proof from some accepted principles was required at least from Plato’s time (Rav, 2008: 136). In the past two centuries, the increasing emphasis seems to have been placed on the axiomatic and rigorous development of mathematics. Against that excessive emphasis on rigor, axiomatics, and formalism in mathematics, new views have emerged that take into account the historical and cultural development of mathematics. In that line of thinking, the development of non-European mathematical traditions, including Hindu mathematics, has been found to be important because they, especially the Hindu tradition, address rigor in the absence of the axiomatic method. To address that trend, the next section examines rigor and reasoning in that tradition before the chapter commits to any philosophical reflections, namely, as a means to examine the relationships between philosophy, rigor, and axiomatics in non-European mathematical traditions.

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20.4 Rigor and Reasoning in Traditional Hindu Mathematics Recent literature has yielded more comprehensive interpretations of mathematics and philosophy. Among the most important interpretations is that mathematics is an intellectual cultural product whose various routes of development can be critically examined from social and cultural perspectives. Such sociocultural interpretations have shed new light on mathematics, particularly on the contributions of non-­ European traditions to its overall development. As a result, mathematics in non-­ European civilizations, including Hindu mathematics, also known as “Indian mathematics,” has especially received sustained attention. In the history of mathematics, the lack of axiomatic–deductive proofs has been a common charge against Hindu mathematics, which has consequently been downgraded in the ranks of mathematical traditions. Carl Boyer (1968: 238), in A History of Mathematics, furnishes evidence of that trend: Although in Hindu trigonometry there is evidence of Greek influence, the Indians seem to have had no occasion to borrow Greek geometry, concerned as they were with simple mensurational in some form as well as axiomatic– deductive method of proof rules.

To show the treatment of Hindu mathematics by numerous Western writers of the history of mathematics, Joseph (1994) has pointed out that many commonly available books on the field’s history either declare or imply that whatever the achievements of Hindu mathematics, they have never had any notion of proof. Indian historians of Hindu mathematics have remarked that the greatest charge against Indian geometry in particular and mathematics in general is indeed the lack of deductive–axiomatic proof that was so beloved to the ancient Greeks (Amma, 1999: 3). However, Amma adds that some commentaries and independent work have preserved proofs and derivations of complicated mathematical series showing that early Indian mathematicians were also not satisfied unless they could prove and derive results. On that topic, Amma mentions an important difference between Greek proof and its Hindu counterpart, that whereas the former is built upon a few self-evident axioms, the latter aims at convincing students about the validity of theorems by way of visual demonstration. A more recent critical interpretation of Indian mathematical traditions, one especially examining the Gaṇita-Yukti-Bhāṣā (Ramasubramanium et al., 2008: 267), holds the following: Many of the results and algorithms discovered by the Indian mathematics have been discovered in some detail. But little attention has been paid to the methodology and foundations of Indian mathematics. There is hardly any discussion of the processes by which Indian mathematicians arrive and justify their results and procedures. And, almost no attention is paid to the philosophical foundations of Indian mathematics, and the Indian understanding of the nature of mathematical objects, and validation of mathematical results and procedures.

Regarding the history of mathematics on the Indian subcontinent, much attention has also been given to extremely large numbers and significant developments in algebra and trigonometry. Ernest (2009: 200) speculates that attention to large numbers with decimal fractions, possibly made possible by virtue of an advanced decimal place value system, might have aided in conceptualizing a large number of

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series expansions in Kerala between the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries, as well as contributed much of the basis for calculus, which is traditionally attributed to mathematicians in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe. Nevertheless, the lack of deductive–axiomatic proof in Hindu mathematical traditions has been viewed as a great lapse. The disparity in interpretations raises the question of whether the development of Indian mathematics indeed addressed valid, rigorous mathematical proofs, as well as the question of whether mathematics can be rigorous without an axiomatic foundation. To begin to answer those questions, I first review the reasoning involved in upapatti, in the Hindu mathematical tradition. Although the tradition lacks formal proof in the sense of Greek-based Western mathematics, it has upapattis as a means of convincing argumentation to show students the validity of theorems through visual demonstration as an acceptable form of proof in geometry (Amma, 1999: 3). Joseph (1994: 197) mentions that roughly 2000 years ago, a great deal of attention in Indian mathematics was paid to providing upapattis, some of which have recently been noted by European scholars of Indian mathematics. In the following subsections, I examine some of the notable features of the status of proof, rigor, and reasoning in Indian mathematics in relation to upapattis. Nature of upapattis  A upapatti is a means of establishing the validity of mathematical truths and removing doubts about such validity. Indian mathematicians agree that results in mathematics cannot be accepted to be valid unless they are supported by a upapatti or yukti, a Sanskrit term used to denote some scheme of demonstration (Ramasubramanium et  al., 2008: 288) that, even today, refers to some method or technique to show how results hold true and/or how a problem can be solved. In geometry, Upapatti seems to be a construction able to reveal how results come to be true or a series of steps involved in algorithms with justification (e.g., the Euclidean algorithm for finding the greatest common divisor, called kuttaka in Hindu mathematics). As mentioned by Amma (1999: 3), proof in Indian mathematics aims at convincing students of the validity of theorems with a visual demonstration of geometry, mostly viewed as a construction to show how results hold true. In fact, most students seem to rely on the scheme of construction to understand how results come to be true and/or how facts hold true. Even mathematicians are said to do so to convince themselves first, while systematic proof or demonstration is required only at a later stage. That is, many basic properties (e.g., axioms, definitions, and rules of inference) are taken for granted while working and only explicitly formulated for publication. If those properties are omitted, however, then the core structure of mathematical derivation contains the scheme to show how facts come to be true. In a sense, it is hardly different from what medieval Hindu mathematicians and astronomers did. Upapattis in geometry are not a Euclidean type of proof or demonstration but can be somewhat compared with constructions in Euclidean geometry (e.g., construction of a triangle with a straight edge and compass) with justification. The problem, albeit not in the form of a theorem, is given with a brief scheme of how to make the

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construction. For example, “To draw a square equal to the difference of two squares” (Amma, 1999: 45), it states: Wishing to deduct a square from a square one should cut off a segment by the side of the square to be removed. One of the lateral side of the segment is drawn diagonally across to touch the other lateral side. The portion of the side beyond this point should be cut off. (English translation based on the Apastamba Sulvasutra)

In demonstrations of geometry (e.g., to convert a rectangle into a square), the construction of schemes involves terms such as “to cut off a part,” “juxtaposed,” and “fill in” in ways similar to making paper cuttings and fillings. As such, it does not show any abstract concept of demonstration such as that in Greek geometry. Because geometry seems to have a relatively calculative nature concentrating on metric notions of length and area and using algebraic notion, geometric algebra could be a major contribution to early Indian mathematics, as mentioned by Seidenberg (1975: 289): Becker accepts, though hesitatingly, an early date for the Indian geometry (the 8th century B.C.). Since the sulvasutra have the theorem of Pythagoras, Becker looks to old- Babylonia for the source of Indian geometry. … The Sulvasutras convert a rectangle (say, a by b) in a typical geometro–algebraic way; the old Babylonian would simply multiply a by b and take the square root. The Indian priest constructs the side of the required square; the old Babylonian computes it. So, the geometric algebra of the Indians could not very well have come from the old Babylonians. And it could not have very well come from the Greeks, at least not in 8th century B.C. And if the Greeks got its geometric algebra from the Indians, then the history of Greek mathematics has to be rewritten.

That excerpt captures the nature of Hindu mathematics and its style of reasoning. Upapattis, as the means of the demonstration and justification of mathematical truth, use both geometrical and algebraic approaches in deriving, for example, the Pythagorean theorem, as done by the great twelfth-century Hindu mathematician Vaskaracharya (Joseph, 1994). The combined geometrical–arithmetical approach can also be observed in the development of infinite series expansion, including the series for the expansion of π (π  =  4–4/3  +  4/5–4/7  +  …) by mathematicians in southern India in the fifteenth century (Amma, 1999: 166), regarded as one of the more sophisticated developments of mathematical reasoning based on similar triangles and the summation of series. It is also a prime example of the extension of mathematics to infinite processes. Nrsimha Daivajńa (1507) explains that the phala (“objective”) of a upapatti is pánditya (“scholarship”) and the removal of doubt that can lead one to reject misinterpretations made by others due to bhranti (“confusion”), among other causes (as cited by Ramasubramanium et  al., 2008). Such an interpretation of upapattis seems to have two major functions: to develop advanced intellectual integrity and to be free from any error or lack of clarity. In a sense, it relates to the process of ensuring rigor, for it needs to be checked against errors in mathematical practice. The purpose of that mathematical development is to make mathematics valid. On that note, establishing the validity of mathematical knowledge by consensus among mathematicians and astronomers seems to have long been unique in Hindu mathematical traditions. Indeed, large gatherings of scholars, especially in the Jain

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community, were often held to (dis)confirm the validity of whatever subject was being discussed. Increased attention to numbers and algorithms  More attention to numbers, algorithms, and calculation has been a common characteristic in the development of Hindu mathematics, presumably made possible by the development of a place value numeration system as a fundamental basis for the development of mathematics in general. Ernest (2009) highlights the importance of Indian emphasis on numbers and calculation for the possible development of infinite series expansions by Kerala mathematicians between the fourteenth and sixth centuries. However, as mentioned, Hindu mathematics has commonly been criticized for lacking proof for valid mathematical results despite the field’s having developed numerous algorithms for facilitating calculation. Indeed, Hindu mathematics places greater emphasis on numbers and algorithms than methodology and foundations for reasoning. To understand the nature of the Hindu mathematical tradition regarding proof, rigor, and reasoning, it may be helpful to consider the underlying perspective. Clarifying the nature and validation of mathematical knowledge, Gaṇita-YuktiBhāṣā (Ramasubramanium et al., 2008) mentions that the classical Indian understanding of the nature and validation of such knowledge seems to be rooted in the larger epistemological perspective developed by the Nyaya school of Indian logic. The distinguishing features of Nyaya logic important to the present discussion include the logic of cognitions (jnana), not propositions as in the Greek system, and the lack of any concept of pure formal validity distinguished from material truth. The text adds that Nyaya logic does not distinguish necessary from contingent truths (i.e., analytic and synthetic truths) or accord the logic (tarka) of proof by contradiction, as used in the development of Greek mathematics. Although the method of proof by contradiction is used occasionally, no upapattis support the existence of any mathematical object merely on the basis of logic alone (Ramasubramanium et al., 2008: 289). Instead, such objects seem to be partly based on the nature of mathematical knowledge, as considered in the next subsection. The nature of mathematical knowledge  Because the development of Hindu mathematics did not subscribe to any concept of absolute certainty but to an elevated intellectual level of mathematics free from confusion achieved by sharing in assemblies of mathematicians, it seems that rigor in mathematical proofs or upapattis developed in a way somewhat similar to Lakatos’s understanding of the genesis and justification of mathematical knowledge. In modern terms, such knowledge may thus be regarded as a quasi-empiricist type of knowledge. In any case, it differs entirely from the Greeks’ notion of indubitable and infallible mathematical knowledge. In the Hindu mathematical tradition, the term for mathematics (Ganita) literally means “the science of calculation,” and the field ranks supreme among all of the secular sciences (Datta and Singh, 1935: 7) in reference to Vedanga Jyotisa (1200 B.C.E.): “As the crests on the heads of the peacocks, as the gems on the hoods of snakes, so is the Ganita as the top of the sciences known as the Vedangas.”

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Even though mathematical knowledge is given a supreme position among all secular sciences in the Hindu tradition, it has no concept of absoluteness, which may be one reason why the Hindu mathematical tradition did not subscribe to the concept of absolute truth as in Greek tradition. In turn, the tradition had no need to subscribe to the notion of perfect rigor in mathematical derivation based on self-­ evident truths and the rules of logical inference as done by the Greeks. That difference in the nature of mathematical knowledge seems to be a primary reason for the difference in rigor and reasoning between Hindu and Greek mathematics.

20.5 Philosophical Reflection The philosophy of mathematics generally does not treat specific mathematical questions but instead attempts to present thoughts, produced through reflection, on what mathematics is and what mathematicians do and to contemplate the present state of affairs in mathematics. It is not mathematics; on the contrary, it is about mathematics, as mentioned by Rényi (2006) in “A Socratic Dialogue on Mathematics.” It might be one of the reasons why Hersh, in the preface of his book What Is Mathematics Really? (1999), states that Richard Courant and Herbert Robbins in their book, What Is Mathematics? Courant and Robbins (1941/1996), do not answer the question raised by their book’s title, a book nevertheless praised by Albert Einstein and Herman Weyl as a work approaching perfection and an astonishing examination of the extent of what mathematics is. Although What Is Mathematics? has been exceptionally useful for understanding many fundamental concepts of mathematics, it does not explicitly deal with the question of what mathematics is, because that question is basically one of philosophy. The task of the philosophy of mathematics is to “reflect on” and “account for” the nature of mathematics (Ernest, 1991: 3), as Ernest (1998) examines in detail. In this section, my focus is to examine philosophical reflections on axiomatic models and the concept of rigor that form the basis of formal mathematics. The twentieth-century development of the three schools of logicism, formalism, and constructivism (incorporating intuitionism) was primarily guided by the purpose of establishing a firm foundation for mathematics with absolute certainty. By extension, Ernest (1998: 53) characterizes philosophers of mathematics as philosophically inclined professional mathematicians, who, with their foundationalist programs, focus on the philosophy of mathematical concerns and problems. However, the philosophers of mathematics that developed those schools could not establish a foundation of absolute truth in mathematics despite numerous attempts, because Kurt Gödel’s incompleteness theorem checkmated the foundationalists’ programs, especially the Hilbert program (Hersh, 1999: 138). If philosophers other than mathematicians were involved in the development of the philosophy of mathematics, then the case could have been different. Arguably, the interest and intention of well-known mathematicians involved in the establishment of the foundation of the philosophy of mathematics created a new perspective on the

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relationship between mathematics and philosophy. The maverick philosopher Hersh (1999: 151) quotes Hilbert’s motive for engaging in the philosophy of mathematics: I wanted certainty in the kind of ways in which people want religious faith. I thought that certainty is more likely to be found in mathematics than elsewhere. … Having constructed an elephant upon which the mathematical world would rest, I found the elephant tottering, and proceeded to construct a tortoise to keep the elephant from falling.

That quotation reveals that the motive behind Hilbert’s formalistic philosophy was to discover the means of achieving certainty in mathematics. However, that motivation indicates an intention of imposition, not one of internal necessity. In a sense, the axiomatic method seems to be intimately related to mathematics as hereditary stresses as demanded for its own sake. In another sense, the method is not genuinely inherent in mathematics. In studying the evolution of mathematical concepts, Wilder (1967) distinguishes two types of influences: cultural influences, which he referred to as “hereditary,” and environmental influences, meaning that the development of most early mathematics, including arithmetic and geometry in their primitive forms, was due to environmental aspects. By contrast, the axiomatic development of mathematics, such as captured in Euclid’s Elements, was chiefly due to hereditary stresses. In that case, the hereditary aspect indicates that the arrangement of mathematical concepts in the form of structures (e.g., in Euclid’s Elements) was mostly forced by an internal need to cope with paradoxes (e.g., Zeno’s paradoxes) and problems, including the problem of the incommensurability of the sides and diagonals of rectangles and squares. Wilder (1967: 115) writes, “Most historians seem to agree that crises, attendant upon the attempts to cope with paradoxes such as those of Zeno, compelled the formulation of a basic set of principles upon which to erect the geometrical edifice.” The axiomatic method is, without a doubt, the single most important contribution of ancient Greece to mathematics, which tends to deal with abstractions and which recognizes that proof by deductive reasoning offers a foundation for mathematical reasoning (Kleiner, 1991). Both Wilder and Kleiner attribute the development of the axiomatic method to the necessity of mathematics. Mueller, by contrast, critically counters Zoltan Szabo’s position that the shift from empirical to pure mathematics was closely connected with the idealistic, anti-empirical character of Eleatic and Platonic philosophy. He insists that a Euclidean derivation is a thought experiment of a certain kind, an experiment intended to show either that a certain operation can be performed or that a certain kind of object has a certain property, and hence Euclidean derivations are quite different from Hilbertian ones, which are usually said to involve no use of spatial intuition. He mentions that the evolution of the axiomatic method is explicable solely in terms of the desire for clarity and order in geometry while the philosophical conceptions of mathematics, such as those of Plato and Aristotle, were more probably the result of philosophically colored reflection on mathematical practice than causes of that practice. Referring to Kline (2008), Yehuda Rav (2008) mentions that it is generally accepted that the organization of

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mathematical knowledge on a deductive basis has roots in the teaching of Plato. He further refers to Kline (2008) to mention that Euclid who organizes the Elements in the third century B.C.E lived in Alexandria and it is quite certain that he was trained as a student in Plato’s academy. Another historian of mathematics, Seidenberg, seems to be one of the harshest critics of the axiomatic development of Euclidean geometry. In his 1975 article “Did Euclid’s Elements, Book I, Develop Geometry Axiomatically?”, Seidenberg states that we have all been told in childhood that Euclid developed the axiomatic method, but that conclusion seems amiss after viewing Elements with modern hindsight. According to Seidenberg, the first three postulates—“To draw a straight line from any one point to any point,” “To produce a finite straight line continuously in a straight line,” and “To describe a circle with any center and distance”—are bona fide axioms in the sense that they serve to control the straight edge and compass; however, they are not axioms for the development of geometry and indeed reveal nothing about space. Referring to Seidenberg’s article, Yehuda  Rav (2008: 137) quotes the same paragraph and summarizes it by asking, “Could it be that, by insisting on the axiomatic method, we are viewing The Elements from a false perspective.” On the contrary, another historian of mathematics, T.  L. Health, admired the genius of Euclid and concluded that the fifth postulate was a postulate, not a theorem to be proven, which took 20 centuries of attempts to finally realize (as cited by Seidenberg, 1975: 271). The above examples are representative of not only contrasting views on the development of the axiomatic method in the pioneering work of Euclid’s Elements but also of the necessity of the axiomatic method as the working basis of mathematics. Yehuda Rav (2008:30) argues as to where the axioms do come and where the axioms do not come in, and, where it seems to be indispensable and where subsidiary. He says unlike the indispensable place of axioms in foundational studies and mathematical logic in general, when looked at other branches of mathematics, it is striking what subsidiary role, if any, is played by axioms other than in geometry or in the introduction of structural axioms that define the subject matter of the theory (such as in group theory). In analyzing the situation, he writes, from its starts analysis stands out as an example of non-axiomatic edifice, but Dedekind’s essay on continuity and irrational numbers was intended as an axiomatic basis of analysis. He claims that analysis has never been axiomatized as a deductive theory as it developed. The rigorization and axiomatization of calculus were made mostly in 19th and 20th century with arithmetization and giving precise definitions of the key concepts (such as, function, limit, continuity, derivative, and integral) and developing rigorous proofs. What seems to me is that the axioms and definitions are also needed in mathematical development for they characterize/specify the abstract mathematical entities (for the mathematical system) which is a kind of creation/construction in mathematics. Otherwise, how could one characterize mathematical notion like groups, real numbers, and complex numbers? It is important to note that intuitively appealing set of counting numbers were needed to be axiomatized as Peano’s postulates only in the nineteenth century to lay foundation for arithmetic. Such situations might also

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indicate that the axiomatic basis of mathematics became necessary at some point in its development sooner or later depending on the nature and development of the subject considered. Peano’s postulates characterized the notion of counting numbers, provided the basis for systematically going forward to any counting numbers, and gave a basis for mathematical induction. The other thing to be noted is that the perceptive philosophers, like Plato and Aristotle, might have perceived the necessity of deductive reasoning to go forward from some basic assumptions which have been found most dependable in mathematics. Not only the modern foundationist philosophers (like Frege, Russell, Hilbert, and Godel) but also logicians and mathematicians have also felt the necessity of an axiomatic model in mathematics. Although it is said that working mathematicians rarely work on the basis of an axiomatic model in most areas of mathematical construction, most mathematicians seem to have strong faith in it. In many cases, a working mathematician may create mathematics constructively, and then in order to justify and communicate it to the circle of mathematicians, he/she may need to seek a convincing basis which in turn draws on an axiomatic basis as the valid reference. This is why both the mathematician and the philosopher may have some common concerns on the rigor and axiomatic basis of mathematics. Traditionally, rigor in reasoning is based on axiomatics, as demonstrated in Kitcher’s (1981) definition, because central to the idea of rigorous reasoning is that it should contain no gaps and that it should proceed by means of elementary steps. In the development of the mentioned three schools, especially formalism and logicism, the rigorous development of mathematical thinking has been the primary function of the philosophy of mathematics and has been intimately related to the fulfillment of the philosophical purpose of achieving the absolute certainty of mathematical knowledge. But, rigor is not only dependent on axiomatics; however, as illustrated by Kitcher (1981), Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (the founders of calculus) felt problems in his interpretation of a derivative. Kitcher shows how Newton faced problems in interpreting the derivative in a rigorous way. In that case, rigor might have been considered differently in geometry and calculus. The arithmetical interpretation of the notion of integration independent from geometrical intuition might be regarded as rigorous in analysis insofar as it further clarifies and generalizes the concept in the domain of real numbers. The development of calculus in the nineteenth century made many concepts clear by formulating concepts through definitions, and intuitive concepts explicitly formulated that helped to conceptualize them precisely resulted in the further conceptualization of the subject. Such cases might represent rigor in non-axiomatic settings. If we consider rigor in light of its precise meaning as in calculus and analysis, then it might seem to be more internal to mathematics and independent from philosophy. Much of the literature indicates that the development of the Greek axiomatic method was closely connected with the dialectical method in Greek philosophy. Referring to Aristotle’s Posterior Analytics, Mueller quotes the Greek philosopher’s view insisting that the assumptions of science be not merely true but also primary, immediate, and more known causes of the conclusion drawn from them. Such views indicate the influence of philosophy on the axiomatic method and on the development

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of rigor in modern mathematics. Such is especially the case of the Eurocentric mathematical tradition being the custodian to ancient Greek thinking. Since the Eurocentric mathematics curriculum has been globalized in the name of valid mathematics, thus in practice, it has been the only mathematics that we think about and perform. That circumstance explains the necessity of examining the nature of the mathematical development of non-European culture, which is found to differ in nature from Western mathematics. In that context, the development of Hindu mathematics seems to be an important one for shedding light on the nature of mathematical knowledge. Hindu mathematics, despite being rich and contributing significantly to the development of mathematics in general, lacks formal axiomatic proof in mathematics, as mentioned. As such, various questions arise: If so, does not the development of Hindu mathematics contain valid and rigorous proof? And what then is the philosophical basis behind them? The Hindu mathematical proof of the upapatti, a means of convincing argumentation for students to grasp the validity of theorems via visual demonstration as an acceptable form of proof in geometry (Amma, 1999: 3), is compatible with recent views on thinking and teaching mathematics, in which proofs are recognized as convincing arguments in constructive ways. With upapattis as a means of establishing the validity of mathematical truths and removing doubt, Indian mathematicians agree that results in mathematics cannot be accepted to be valid unless they are supported by upapattis as mentioned in Ganitayuktibhasa (Ramasubramanium et  al., 2008: 288). On that topic, Ramasubramanium et al., refers to Nrsimha Daivajńa’s (1507) assertion that the phala (“objective”) of a upapatti is pánditya (“scholarship”) and the removal of doubt that can lead one to reject misinterpretations made by others due to bhranti (“confusion”), among other causes. Thus, rigor is achieved through an elevation of intellect accompanied by the removal of any confusion or error, while validity is achieved by consensus among mathematicians. Such a view on mathematical thinking seems to be somewhat similar to the quasi-empiricist view on mathematics stating that mathematics is a dialogue between people tackling mathematical problems (Lakatos, 1976). The quasi-­ empirical nature of Indian mathematics, at least to some extent, makes it analogous to the natural sciences. In the chapter “The Genre of Indian Mathematics,” Khim Plofker (2009) mentions, via an Indian source, that Indian mathematics mostly served as the handmaid of astronomy, while credit for divorcing mathematics from astronomy is particularly due to Bakhshali manuscript and mathematicians Mahāvīra, from the ninth century, and Sridhara, from the ninth and tenth centuries. As a result, Hindu mathematics developed in the service of religion. The religioastronomical orientation of Hindu mathematics differed from that of the development of Western mathematics, which seems to have been motivated by a combination of mathematics and theology beginning with Pythagoras and, from there, characterized religious philosophy in ancient Greece, in Europe in the Middle Ages, and the West in modern times through Immanuel Kant (Russell, 1957). According to Russell (1957:37), there has been an intimate blending of religion and reasoning, of moral aspiration and logical admiration for what is timeless, all of which comes from

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Pythagoras and distinguishes the intellectualized theology of Europe from the more straightforward mysticism of Asia. Russell characterizes the nature of Western intellectual thinking as that which gave rise to the timeless truth of mathematics. That view on the development of Western mathematics indicates both a philosophical and mathematical basis for the development of the axiomatic method and rigor based on it, as well as differs from the relatively naive basis of the Hindu mathematical tradition.

20.6 Summary and Conclusion Rigor in reasoning and the axiomatic basis of proof seem to be central to a mathematical proof in general. Whereas rigor is primarily guided by an intention to achieve the flawless derivation of mathematical truths, the axiomatic model of proof seems to have resulted from ancient Greeks’ intellectual and cultural tradition motivated particularly by the philosophical thinking of Plato and Aristotle. The dynamic between them can be examined along at least two lines of thinking. On the one hand is the thinking of Mueller (1969), which insists that the evolution of the axiomatic method is explicable solely in terms of the desire for clarity and order in geometry and that the philosophical conceptions of mathematics, including those of Plato and Aristotle, were more probably the result of philosophically colored reflection on mathematical practice than on the causes of that practice. On the other hand is Wilder’s (1967) thinking that the development of the Greek axiomatic method was closely connected with the development of the dialectical method in Greek philosophy, which is also Szabo’s (1969) view. Wilder (1967: 115) writes “Most historians seem to agree that crises, attendant upon the attempts to cope with paradoxes such as those of Zeno, compelled the formulation of a basic set of principles upon which to erect the geometrical edifice.” He pointed out that the role of the axiomatic method in Greek mathematics seems to have been a twofold objective, the provision of foundation which at the same time met the current charge of inconsistency, where the later one may have been the motivating factor (p.117). However, formal axiomatic thinking in mathematics from the twentieth century was guided by the purpose of establishing consistent mathematical truths, which, in effect, demanded rigor based on axiomatic and formal logic. In turn, the twentieth-­ century foundationalists such as Hilbert and Russell (with Whitehead) put forth great effort in different ways to lay a firm foundation for the absolute certainty of mathematical knowledge and protect it from contradictions and antinomies that arose at the turn of the century (Ernest, 1991: 8). But the humanist/maverick philosopher Reuben Hersh mentions that such attempts have been checkmated by Godel incompleteness theorems. Maverick and social constructivist thinkers have explained the mathematical rigorous development as a cultural function. Social constructivists view the precise development of formal reasoning in mathematics as indicating a higher level of cultural growth. To explain its cause, Sal Restive (1994: 216) writes that the greater the level of cultural growth, the greater

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the distance between the material ground and its symbolic representation, and the more that the boundaries separating mathematics worlds from each other and from social worlds thicken and become increasingly impenetrable. Such an interpretation explains why pure mathematics seems to be isolated from the social world. A similar reason might apply to its relationship with philosophy, because the philosophy of mathematics is also an outcome of cultural growth that addresses mathematics from a different perspective. Because philosophy is not mathematics but about mathematics as seen from a distant position (Rényi, 2006), philosophy takes a distant view of mathematics, one that seems to be remote but is in fact powerful and provides the grounds for the existence and justification of mathematical truths by characterizing the nature of mathematical knowledge. Nevertheless, in the case of twentieth-century foundationalist philosophers such as Frege, Hilbert, and Russell, philosophy plays a different role. Indeed, well-known mathematicians such as Hilbert sought ground on which to establish mathematics as being absolutely true. To that purpose, he purposively imposed his theory of meta-mathematics to make that foundation rigorous. Being a mathematician–philosopher, he also attempted to rescue philosophy by providing that firm foundation and gave rigorous treatment to Euclidean geometry, a prime example of a modern axiomatic model. Thus, his meta-mathematics can be viewed as an imposition for the purpose of creating absolute rigor in proof. In that and other ways, philosophy has been related to rigor and the axiomatic method. By contrast, the remarkable development of Hindu mathematics (Almeida & Joseph, 2009), one without axiomatic rigor or any well-formed philosophical presumptions, tells a different story of the development of mathematics. Even though Hindu mathematics lacks proofs based on axiomatics, it developed reasoning for the clarification and validation of mathematical truths in upapattis, a form of convincing argumentation. Hindu mathematics was also developed in the service of religion and bears a religio-astronomical orientation (Amma, 1999: 4). Even so, the religio-astronomical orientation of Hindu mathematics differs from the orientation of the development of Western mathematics, which seems to have been motivated by a combination of mathematics and theology beginning with Pythagoras. According to Russell (1957: 37), the intimate combination of religion and reasoning, of moral aspiration and logical admiration for what is timeless, comes from Pythagoras and distinguishes the intellectualized theology of Europe from the more straightforward mysticism of Asia. Thus, the development of timeless truth in mathematics has been based on axiomatics and logical rigor, largely motivated by the desire for absolute truth in mathematics. The axiomatic method is taken to be the single greatest contribution of ancient Greek thinking and thus remains dominant in mathematics. By the same token, not having been motivated by such thinking, even with the active contact of India and Greeks in centuries past, is viewed as being one of the great lapses of Indian scholarship (Amma, 1999: 4). Due to the lack of any deductive or axiomatic structure in mathematical results, Hindu mathematics may have missed opportunities to face logical problems such as mathematics in Greece faced during its development. After all, the method of proof by contradiction is used rarely and only to show the nonexistence of certain entities.

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From a sociocultural perspective, that development should not be viewed as a lapse, but as a different route toward mathematics that did not require using the Greek style of deductive–axiomatic thinking. Because Hindu methods were pedagogically oriented to convince students of the validity of mathematics, many well-known scholars composed commentaries in addition to their original contributions, which also became of pedagogical use. The oral transmission of knowledge in gurukul education also preserved those methods. Although those methods may seem to represent naive mathematical thinking, one not bothered with the problem of absolute certainty and geared toward the solution of problems without any presumed conception of ideal mathematics, they might also direct us toward thinking in alternative ways. At the very least, they convey that an emphasis on rigor and axiomatics is not the basic universal character of mathematical thinking or teaching. In light of the above discussion, it seems that the axiomatic method and the concept of rigor based on it are not inherently contingent in mathematics but instead motivated by a particular intellectual–cultural development. Even so, rigor as the flawless, clear, precise, and organized elevation of intellectual thinking in mathematics seems to be more innate to mathematics in the sense that both proof and upapatti share the common purpose of justification and the elevation of intellect (budhi-vridhi). Despite differences in the nature of their development, they seem to share the common basis of mathematical objectivity, as also seen in the development of Egyptian geometry, which was guided by the purpose to measure land, and the development of Hindu geometry, guided by the religious purpose of making altars and fireplaces. Such objectivity in mathematics might be a common motivation among mathematicians, and the logical axiomatic method used in mathematics is the rule for organizing and preserving the certainty that mathematicians value. Indeed, most mathematicians seem to believe in some kind of certainty in their mathematical discoveries: that certain sudden “A-ha!” or “Eureka!” moment during their mathematical thinking (Byers, 2007: 329). However, maverick philosophers Hersh and Steiner (2011: 54) interpret that feeling of certainty as an aesthetic pleasure—a satisfaction with deep, clear thinking—and as simply the emotional roller coaster of discovery. Nevertheless, belief in the certainty of mathematical knowledge seems to be common among users of mathematics, including teachers and students, most likely, I think, due to the usefulness and dependability of mathematics (Shrestha, 2019). Certainty also seems to be the common motivation of most mathematicians and philosophers, though they differ in their vocations. Ancient Hindu thinkers ranked Ganita as being supreme knowledge above all other knowledge but did not subscribe to the notion of absoluteness. The axiomatic method, as a special attribute of the ancient Greeks’ intellectual development and its pursuit of absolute truth, seems to have a unique philosophical orientation in addition to a mathematical basis. However, exceeding emphasis on axiomatics and rigor based on it, including that endorsed by Hilbert and Russell (with Whitehead), seems to be exceedingly intentional and can be viewed as an intended imposition (motivated by the desire to meet the crisis in the foundation caused by the set-­ theoretic foundation), even if all mathematical constructions in a sense are intentional to some extent.

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References Almeida, D., & Joseph, G. (2009). Kerala mathematics and its possible transmission to Europe. In P.  Ernest, B.  Greer, & B.  Sriraman (Eds.), Critical issues in mathematics education (pp. 171–188). Information Age. Amma, T. (1999). Geometry in ancient and medieval India. Motilal Banarsidass. Bell, E. (1934). The place of rigor in mathematics. The American Mathematical Monthly, 41(10), 599–607. Boyer, C. (1968). A history of mathematics. Wiley. Byers, W. (2007). How mathematicians think. Princeton University Press. Coster, H., & Leik, R. (1964). Deductions from axiomatic theory. American Sociological Review, 29(6), 819–835. Courant, R., & Robbins, H. (1941/1996). What is mathematics? Oxford University Press. Data, B., & Singh, A. (1935). History of Hindu mathematics. Nagari. Ernest, P. (1991). The philosophy of mathematics education. Falmer Press. Ernest, P. (1998). Social constructivism as a philosophy of mathematics education. State University of New York Press. Ernest, P. (2009). The philosophy of mathematics, values and Keralese mathematics. In P. Ernest, B.  Greer, & B.  Sriraman (Eds.), Critical issues in mathematics education (pp.  189–204). Information Age. Hersh, R. (1999). What is mathematics really? Oxford University Press. Hersh, R., & Steiner, J. (2011). Loving and hating mathematics. Princeton University Press. Joseph, G. (1994). Different ways of knowing: Contrasting styles of argument in Indian and Greek mathematical traditions. In P.  Ernest (Ed.), Mathematics, education and philosophy (pp. 194–203). Falmer Press. Kitcher, P. (1981). Mathematical rigor – Who needs it? Noûs, 15(4), 469–493. Kleiner, I. (1991). Rigor and proof in mathematics: A historical perspective. Mathematics Magazine, 64(5), 291–314. Lakatos, E. (1976). Proofs and refutations. Cambridge University Press. Mueller, I. (1969). Euclid’s elements and the axiomatic method. The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 20(4), 289–309. Plofker, K. (2009). Mathematics in India. Delhi: Hindustan Book Agency. Ramasubramanium, K., Shrinivas, M. D. & Sriram, M. S. (2008). Ganita-Yukti-Bhasa, Hindustan Book Agency: New Delhi. Rav, Y. (2008). The axiomatic method in theory and practice. Logique et Analyse. Rényi, A. (2006). A Socratic dialogue on mathematics. In R.  Hersh (Ed.), 18 unconventional essays on the nature of mathematics (pp. 1–16). Springer. Russell, B. (1957). History of Western Philosophy. Allen and Unwin, Ltd., London. Seidenberg, A. (1975). Did Euclid’s Elements, Book I, develop geometry axiomatically? Archive for History of Exact Science, 14(4), 263–295. Shrestha, M. (2019). Where lies the reality of mathematics for common people? Philosophy of Mathematics Education Journal (on line), Number 35, December. Skovsmose, O. (2010). Can facts be fabricated through mathematics? In P. Ernest (Ed.), Philosophy of Mathematics Education Journal (online), Number 25, October. Weintraub, E. (1998). Controversy: Axiomatisches Mißverständnis. Economic Journal, 108(451), 1837–1847. Wilder, R. (1967). The role of the axiomatic method. The American Mathematical Monthly, 74(2), 115–127.

Chapter 21

Idealism and Materialism in Mathematics Teaching: An Analysis from the Socio-­epistemological Theory Karla Sepúlveda Obreque and Javier Lezama Andalon

21.1 Introduction Teaching of mathematics is a part of social sciences. However, mathematical knowledge itself does not have a clear connotation or at least a single acceptance by the entire population. Philosophy of mathematics has tried to find ontological and epistemological answers to the problem of mathematics and its nature. The discernment of its origin and nature have generated different philosophical positions throughout history. Sometimes these positions have not only been different but also contrary to each other. For Zalamea (2021), the efforts of the philosophy of mathematics have focused on answering issues related to its being and nature, but it is still pending to deal with historical and phenomenological issues related to this knowledge. These ways of thinking and understanding knowledge, reality, and mathematical knowledge, in particular, are present and expressed in the classroom during the activity of teaching mathematics. Its manifestations are not always perceptible and can become unconscious in teachers and students. Sometimes they are deliberate choices made by teachers according to their ways of thinking or understanding reality. Two philosophical currents that understand mathematical knowledge in a different and contrary way are idealism and materialism. Both are present in the teaching of mathematics in the classroom. The aim of this chapter is to reflect on their expressions in the classroom and their implications. The reflection we present is based on an approach of the socio-epistemological theory.

K. Sepúlveda Obreque (*) CIED, Universidad Católica de Temuco, Temuco, Chile e-mail: [email protected] J. Lezama Andalon Instituto Politécnico Nacional de México – CICATA, México DF, México © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_21

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Idealism as a philosophical current is commonly related to the philosophy of Plato, who proposes that the authentic reality is in the world of ideas, and not in the reality sensible to our senses. This idea corresponds to a priori conceptions of knowledge. For Plato, ideas are the true reality, because unlike the sensible and changing world captured by our senses, ideas are eternal and immutable. From this perspective, the senses give us knowledge of the particular, but the universal is only attainable through reason. For its part, German idealism, with representatives such as Fichte, Schelling, or Hegel, rejects the notion of noumenon, nothing exists beyond known reality. For Echegoyen (1997) German idealism enhances the active role of the cognizing subject and affirms that all aspects of known reality are a consequence of its activity. For his part, Zalamea (2021) explains that epistemological idealism does not need to rely on real correlates, because its truth values are ideas. In opposition to idealism, materialism as a philosophical current grants reality a material character, which is governed by the laws of motion of matter. For Reyes (2020), in materialism, consciousness has a secondary character. For philosophical materialism, matter is not created by the materialization of an “absolute idea” or of a “universal spirit,” it exists eternally and develops by the laws that govern movement. Philosophical thought, matter, nature, and being are an objective reality that exists outside our consciousness and is independent of it. Thus, thought is a product of matter and is elaborated by our brain. In other words, knowledge is a posteriori. Social epistemology as a theory of educational mathematics deals with the study of didactic phenomena linked to mathematical knowledge, assuming the legitimacy of all forms of knowledge, whether popular, technical, or cultured, since it considers that they, as a whole, constitute human wisdom (Cantoral et al., 2014). The socio-­ epistemological research program differs from classical programs because it is concerned with explaining the social construction of mathematical knowledge and institutional diffusion. Considering that mathematical knowledge is the result of a process of social construction in situated contexts gives social epistemology a character of a materialistic theory. Socio-epistemological theory is concerned with the study of man doing mathematics in specific contexts. With this, it makes up for the lack of attention that the philosophy of mathematics has paid to the historical contexts and situations that give rise to mathematical knowledge. Socio-epistemological studies are characterized by problematizing knowledge, historicizing it, and dialectizing it. This theory takes elements from mathematics and social sciences. From mathematics, it considers its cultural dimension, and from the social sciences, it considers the acceptance of the construction of shared meanings. A preliminary statement of the socio-epistemological research program is that mathematics is a human creation situated in particular socio-historical contexts. For some, reality and knowledge have been understood as matters in general. For example, for idealism concepts such as immutability and universality are endorsements of absolute general truths. Sometimes it has been thought that these general matters are governed by general laws, such as the invariable laws of nature.

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Newton and Linnaeus thought that nature and organic beings were general and immutable matters, but today we know that this is not the case. Nature and all organisms not only mutate, but their changes are the product of their own stories. That is, the current state of all things and reality are a particular historical result. In Smith (1982) and Ricardo (2001), reality and knowledge are understood as the product of the individual action of man on his environment to obtain subsistence conditions. This way of thinking was called Robinsonades by the nineteenth-century materialists. Marx (2007) explain that in the Robinsonades of the eighteenth century, presented a subject isolated from society who manages to subsist alone in nature, becoming the starting point of history. This idea that conceives the possibility of an individual without a social bond is qualified by materialists as something unrealizable. To refute the idea of an individual devoid of a social bond, Marx (2007) compares it to the possibility of the emergence of language without individuals. According to materialist positions, the existence of a human being without social fabric isn’t possible. The current social density makes impossible the existence of the individual outside of society. The social reality and the set of historical elements of a particular moment are those who imprint the determining characteristics on the production processes and the products involved in these processes. The products as products and at the same time inputs for new productions are influenced by their historical context of production. The same happens with the production of mathematical knowledge, as a social, historical, and territorially situated production. In this way, knowledge understood as a human product arises from a production process where the man who produces it is also transformed, going from a producer of knowledge to a product of his own production process. In sum, man is no longer the starting point of history, but a product of history. In short, man and knowledge exist and are the product of their social-historical reality in particular. This way of understanding knowledge happens for the production of mathematical knowledge and situates it as a historical product. The socio-epistemological theory does not consider mathematical knowledge “in general,” because from the historical understanding of the production processes, mathematical knowledge is understood as a “particular situated” product. Socioepistemology conceives man as a gregarious being, part of a historically determined social group, which is why it conceives of knowledge as a particular historical product. Socio- epistemological studies understand and address mathematical knowledge in four dimensions: epistemological, didactic, social, and cognitive. A principle of socio-epistemology that accounts for this way of thinking is the principle of epistemic relativity. This principle validates various ways of knowing and meaning in mathematics. Other socio-epistemological principles that show the materialistic nature of the theory are contextualized rationality, progressive resignification, and the normative principle of social practice. Regarding the value of mathematical knowledge, for Cantoral (2013) it consists in the use that people can make of it. Production and use value form an indivisible unit in the very production of mathematical knowledge.

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The socio-epistemological theory seeks to explain the social construction of mathematical knowledge, considering it as an epistemological alternative that incorporates the social component. Understanding the social not only as the idea of interaction between people of a social group, but from socio-epistemology it is described as the set of regulations that regulate the behavior of groups. In the interview with OEI, Cantoral (2019) explains that these groups can be the inhabitants of a geographic region or the students of a course in a primary school. This chapter will analyze the presence of idealistic and materialistic positions in the teaching of school mathematics from a socio- epistemological perspective.

21.2 Mathematical Knowledge: A Vision from Idealism and Materialism Idealism and materialism as philosophical currents, like the rest of philosophy, seek the ultimate meaning of the consciousness of the world and of all forms of existence. In the case of mathematical knowledge, these currents of thought problematize the duality “universality or particularity.” Zalamea (2021) explains that there is a tension between the uniqueness or multiplicity of the objects and methods of mathematics, as well as of mathematical thought in general. He adds that resolving this binary situation is not simple, since it requires a complex analysis of reality in an integrated manner. Reflecting on the dualities in mathematical knowledge, on the existence of the plural or the singular, the objective or the subjective of this knowledge, the universal or the particular of mathematics, is not something new. For centuries philosophers have been dealing with these questions and have disagreed among themselves. For example, Engels (1960) mentions that for Dühring philosophy is about the development of the highest form of consciousness of the world and of life and includes in a broad sense the principles of all knowledge and all will. If ideas are accepted as they are, it is necessary to be able to answer what those principles are and what their origin is. Those could come from the mind and thought or from the physical world. Solving issues like this occupy philosophy and at the same time divide it. The different ways of understanding reality are related to the way in which we understand the origin and nature of knowledge. For his part, Zalamea (2021) states that it is not convenient to unilaterally choose one current of thought or another. According to him, in mathematics there is a mixture between realism and idealism that does not allow us to have ontologies or a priori epistemologies without first observing all mathematical knowledge in detail. Regarding whether mathematics comes from the world of a priori ideas or from the physical world, Celluci (2013) states that there is evidence from cognitive science that as a result of biological evolution we have “core knowledge systems” that are phylogenetically ancient, innate, and universal. These systems capture the primary information of the positive

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integer system and the Euclidean plane geometry system. He calls these “natural systems.” He adds that there is also an artificial mathematics, which is constructed by humans and is not the result of their biological evolution. It is rather the result of the need to develop models, maps, or symbol systems. From the socio-epistemological theory, the concept of “social practice” refers to the activity of the human being in the environment in which it develops. Cantoral (2013) explains that social practices generate mathematical knowledge. Some social practices that are identified in different human groups are count, measure, compare, approximate, predict, equate, infer, visualize, and anticipate. Mathematical knowledge, however, it’s conceived, is a philosophical matter par excellence. When studying mathematical knowledge in philosophical study, we find that the main difference between the different principles of philosophy lies in the origin attributed to them. For idealists, the construction of the world and reality come from thought, mental constructions, and invariant categories that precede man and his history. For materialists this is not so, for them knowledge and mathematical knowledge in particular, does not come from thought detached from the external world. They come from human action on the external world, so the principles that govern it are not the starting point of knowledge, but the historical result of man’s productive work. In this way, mathematical knowledge is not a way of thinking that is applied to nature and history but is a product that is obtained from them. In a critique of idealism from a materialist, Marx’s position uses the concept of ideology or false consciousness of reality to refer to what he describes as an inverted understanding of reality. He criticizes those who try to explain from the development of ideas, issues of nature, or the human person. This understanding of things would be inverted because it is based on unjustified basic ideas or assumptions on which its validity depends. In the formal constructions of mathematical knowledge, there are also basic discursive determinations called axioms which are established as a starting point. The axioms correspond to truths that are accepted without proving them, and they are not provable from mathematics itself. These postulates are the product of our language and are established as truths that obey our intention to validate them. The axioms provide the discursive base with which mathematicians can advance in the establishment of theorems and discover the logical consequences of the conventions initiated from the terms of a theory. Arboleda (2002) discusses the difficulty of using the axiomatic- deductive method in mathematics research and teaching. He explains that it is possible to use the axiomatic method to base mathematics on a reduced number of simple principles, but emphasizes the importance of verifying in teaching and researching the agreement between the logical definition of an object and its experimental representation; by this he refers to the function called “deaxiomatization” proposed by Frechet. For his part, Celluci (2013) analyzes the inconsistency of the axiomatic method which he describes as the deduction of a group of basic axioms, which must be assumed to be consistent in order to justify a statement. In this way, Celluci validates the analytical method, because for this method the hypotheses used in the solution of a mathematical

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problem do not have to belong to the same field of the problem, which broadens its resolution possibilities by integrating mathematics to other areas of reality. In these types of issues lie the differences between idealists and materialists about mathematical knowledge. For some, this arises from logical inferences based on elementary a priori assumptions, and for others, mathematical knowledge is the result of a historical process of material intervention in nature that establishes transitory truths a posteriori. In the philosophy of mathematics, platonic ideas dominate where mathematical objects exist governed by their own relationships with each other, those that occur independently of us and the physical world. For Platonism, mathematical meanings are explained in relation to their truth conditions that are justified or denied in mathematics itself. The opposite of this is to justify the meaning of a mathematical object considering the conditions that allow obtaining proofs of truth. Idealism as a philosophical current from its beginnings with Plato to the German idealism of the eighteenth century shares the idea that the knowledge of phenomena should tend to the ideal, should be, considering that the state of perfection of things is found in Metaphysical space. Idealism as a philosophical current from its beginnings with Plato to the German idealism of the eighteenth century shares the idea that the knowledge of phenomena should tend to the ideal, to the “must be,” considering that the state of perfection of things is found in metaphysical space. Engels (1961) in his Dialectics of Nature criticizes metaphysical mathematicians and mentions them as a mixture of remnants of old philosophies that boast of unshakable results using imaginary magnitudes. For example, holding that a=a as a principle of identity is only true in ideal terms, because no organism or object is equal to itself in nature, except at the same instant. An indisputable truth of material reality is that everything is constantly changing. Therefore, a correct mathematical philosophy should deal with the dialectical relationship of identity and difference in order to explain the state of things. The general laws that are possible to establish from the verification of ideal objects are not really general in all time or all space. Its validity is limited to the space of ideas. For example, the concept of infinity corresponds to an ideal object. The set of Natural numbers (N) contains infinite elements. In reality there is no infinity, the universe is not infinite, for some it is expanding, and for others it is oscillating; therefore, there can be no straight lines or parallel lines or any infinite length in nature. If these different ways of understanding mathematical knowledge are considered as opposing philosophical positions, it is worth asking which of them is correct. Answering that question requires a deep and complex analysis that cannot be taken lightly. To elucidate which current is true, it is necessary to establish what is meant by truth and to carefully review the historical development of each of them and the multiple elements that affect them, at least. In relation to whether mathematical knowledge corresponds to ideal notions or to historically situated constructions from material reality, in Aboites and Aboites (2008), we find some questions that may help us to answer this dilemma:

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If Bohr’s theory of the atom talks about nuclei and electrons, are those nuclei and electrons real and do they exist as the theory predicts? Or, is Bohr’s theory of the atom just a useful tool for calculating the optical spectra of light atoms like hydrogen and helium, regardless of whether what the theory says about electrons spinning around nuclei exists in reality or not? Does the number Pi exist independently of whether there are human minds to conceive it, what is the relationship between logic and mathematics, are they the same thing, is mathematical knowledge just a game of chance, and are they the same thing? Are they the same? Is mathematical knowledge just a game based on symbols and rules? Do Gödel’s incompleteness theorems affect what we can or cannot say about the world? Is the logic of our thinking unique? Is mathematics essential to science, or can science be done without mathematics? Is mathematics part of a web of knowledge or is it independent of the world? (Aboites & Aboites, 2008, p.11)

In this chapter it is not intended to establish the character of truth of each one of them; however, from socio-epistemology we are interested in investigating if they are present in the teaching of school mathematics.

21.3 Philosophical Expressions of the School Curriculum The school curriculum is a construct of a philosophical nature. This expression of the school itself contains ontological, epistemological, teleological, and axiological implications. With all this, the school determines the type of human being that it intends to produce from its anthropogenic function. With the curriculum, the school validates a type of knowledge as official, establishes the goals of the social subject, and attempts to institute official social values. In this way, students are trained from the school duty expressed through ethical assumptions of the curriculum that determine the socially standardized moral subject. Our interest is to analyze epistemologically the expression of idealism and materialism in the teaching of mathematical knowledge. In consideration of the socioepistemological character of our analysis, it is necessary to consider the didactic, social, and cognitive dimensions. For this, we will analyze some elements of the Chilean school curriculum. The subject that deals with teaching mathematical knowledge in the Chilean school is called mathematics. The singular of the name is an epistemic evidence that shows that in the Chilean school only one mathematics is accepted as official and is taught. The first learning objectives of this subject indicate that children must count, read, compare, and order numbers in a field less than 100. The implicit character given to the idea of number accounts for abstract, independent, or metaphysical objects. In the consideration of the number as a mathematical object, a monocultural position is appreciated that does not include other forms of counting other than the use of the natural numbers N. The natural numbers N included in the curriculum are a set that is established logically from the Peano Axioms. This axiomatic does not deal with defining the number, the same thing happens in the curriculum in the first courses. Students read, order, and compare numbers without knowing the definition of numbers. They

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incorporate the concept of number with pictorial and concrete supports, sensing its possible meaning, without receiving a formal definition. The complexity of this lies in the difficulty of knowing and understanding abstract ideas if you do not have a clear definition of them. The axiomatic of the natural numbers N contains the notion of infinity in the third axiom. By defining that every natural number has a successor that is also a natural number, it is established that it is a set with infinite elements. The notion of infinity is an abstraction that does not exist in nature, just as numbers do not exist. Its understanding requires the creation of mental structures associated with abstract ideas about ideal objects not possible to verify in the physical world. The students of the first school levels do not have the necessary evolutionary development to understand this type of ideas. Trying to make them understand them demands a great didactic effort from teachers who must use concrete representations to ensure that children have an understanding of the natural numbers N. In this sense, knowing and understanding mathematical objects proposed from idealism present great difficulties of understanding for school children of the initial courses. The idea of infinity present in school mathematics is unaware of the natural world and physical laws as we know them. The laws that govern the phenomena of nature are mainly geocentric, and the development of science has made it possible to establish general laws that cover places outside the earth, but not the entire universe, so the idea of eternal or infinite laws is not possible. The infinite from mathematics is an abstraction, a creation of thought that exists in the world of ideas. This abstraction can be understood as an eternal repetition, an enormous magnitude, or the permanent development of something and brings with it the idea of movement. Perhaps the only way to explain the notion of infinity in relation to material reality is with the eternal state of movement and change. Didactic work with children will be more successful if they manage to relate what they need to learn with their context and their material reality. The idea of numbers has been typical of various cultures and human groups throughout history. There are Roman, Egyptian, Mayan, and Mapuche numbers, to name a few. Each culture has created them with the intention of counting or quantifying, their differences lie in formal matters such as their writing, their base system, or their relationship with axiological or religious matters of the human groups that created them. For example, zero has been the object of study for having different meanings in the different numbering systems. For Aczel (2016) zero is “the greatest intellectual achievement of the human mind” (p. 201). In Villamil and Riscanevo (2020), we find that in Egypt zero was used as a reference value in construction plans to refer to the base level. They add that in Chinese civilization zero was interpreted as the absence of elements. In Mesoamerica, the Mayans also used the zero and represented it with a snail shell. For Duque (2013) this symbol was associated with the cycle of the mollusk that was coming to an end. The Mayans also symbolized zero with a corn seed that represented the beginning and end of the cycle of a seed before changing levels and becoming a flower, which was understood as a spiritual level. Zero as we know it in the current decimal system is related to nothing. Villamil and Riscanevo (2020) quote Betti (2017) saying that

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the symbol for zero was created by Ptolemy who used the first letter omicron with which the word ουδεν begins, which refers to nothing. These diverse meanings about zero account for socially and historically situated constructions, related to the material environments and cultural meanings of different human groups. In these constructions we observe the presence of axiological elements that are the result of a material way of life. For students at the school stage, understanding the idea of the absence of elements in a set and its symbolism or the absence of value in some position of a number in the decimal system, are complex abstract ideas. These ideas may attempt to be represented concretely, but they do not exist in the physical world as they are described as mathematical objects. If, in addition, the mathematical notions presented to students are axiologically neutral, a new difficulty is added, because the material world in which they live and the things that surround them are related to values, which are a historical result of life in society. The school curriculum contains a large number of idealistic elements and a priori conceptions of mathematical objects. Understanding mathematical constructions as abstract and independent objects is a mono-epistemic expression that does not consider their social value and can cause cognitive difficulties in students. In the review of the school mathematics curriculum, we find that there is no evidence of a materialist position in it. On the contrary, the learning objectives of the different school levels contain various mathematical objects, all of which do not exist in the material or social reality of the student body. Despite the didactic guidelines that suggest contextualizing the teaching, the learning objectives propose the understanding of the mathematical objects themselves. To facilitate knowing and understanding the mathematical concepts of the school curriculum, a didactic work is required that relates them to the social and material reality of the students so that they make sense to them. The socio-epistemological theory as an epistemic alternative incorporates the social component, dealing with the mathematical knowledge put into play and promoting the significance of mathematical objects based on the use made of them. This materialist epistemological current recognizes different rationalities, validates different ways of knowing, and gives meaning to the teaching of mathematics, accepting the progressive redefinition of knowledge.

21.4 A Look at Classroom Work The importance of analyzing the presence of philosophical expressions in the work of teachers lies in the anthropogenic implications of school education. Teachers with their speech legitimize another way of understanding knowledge and reality, and that influences students. Cantoral et  al. (2015) point out that the school mathematical discourse shared by teachers validates the introduction of mathematical knowledge in the educational system and legitimizes a new system of reason. In Sepúlveda’s doctoral research (2021), classes of a group of teachers from southern Chile were observed. Then they reflected with them on mathematical

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knowledge. From this experience we can say that teachers, in general, are not aware of the epistemology they have about mathematical knowledge. Nor aware of the philosophical content of the statements he or she makes to students about mathematical knowledge. In order to try to understand whether there is a presence of one or another philosophical current in the teaching of mathematics, we observed how teachers develop the school curriculum with students. We placed ourselves in the first school years and in the teaching of numbers and basic operations. For example, we looked at the way teachers taught counting. They ask children to read the numbers printed on sheets stuck on the walls of the classroom. In this activity the children start counting from zero. This work carried out by the students is related to the memory process. The absence of concrete material to count prevents children from intuiting that it is not possible to use zero to count something. The ability to count is the individual assignment of labels in sequence to the elements of a set, where the last label represents the cardinal (Caballero, 2006, p. 27). According to this, it cannot be counted when there are no elements to label. Counting using zero would be counting nothing and that is not possible in the physical world. The implications of zero and the concept of nothing, in students who are still in the evolutionary stage of concrete operations, are theoretically impossible. In this, a lack of reflection by teachers between mathematical objects and their relationship with the physical world is observed. For example, Dummett (1986) mentions that when we know that there are 5 men and 7 women in a room, we say that there are 12 people. To know the total number of people in the room, counting was not used, addition was used. Something similar is found in Quidel and Sepúlveda (2016) who comment that when a Mapuche person was asked how he counted the sheep he had, he indicated that because of their color. If there were the amounts corresponding to each color, then there were 30 of his sheep. In this case, what the Mapuche person does to count is to add. This gives us evidence of the relative value of knowledge and allows us to understand that formal knowledge and knowledge put to use are not the same. In the teaching of addition and subtraction, zero is also a number that can be difficult to understand. When working with concrete elements, you cannot add zero objects, however, in addition as a mathematical object, there is adding zero (a  +  0  =  a). Zero is the neutral element of addition. In the case of subtraction, mathematically zero can be subtracted, however, in a material context if I do not take anything away, I am not subtracting. In this a difference is observed between the understanding of numbers as ideal objects a priori and numbers as objects in use a posteriori. In this type of situation, philosophical assumptions present in teaching and the constant idealism-materialism tension are revealed. In relation to how teachers teach basic operations, something similar happens in relation to the epistemic tensions mentioned above. To teach addition, teachers tell children that adding is increase and subtracting is taking away. This is true when dealing with a collection of concrete elements. Teachers explain multiplication as repeated addition and division as condensed subtraction. Indeed, this is fulfilled in the set of Natural numbers (N). But, for multiplication or division cases such as

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0.6 × 0.3̅ ó 0.87, the above does not hold. The teaching of addition or basic operations as a priori ideal mathematical objects have certain properties that are not possible to find or demonstrate in a material reality. For example, in school rationality, mathematical objects, adding is equal to subtracting, a  +    −  b  =  a  −  b, in other words, in the addition/subtraction relationship, it is always an addition. Similarly, a 1 the division of  a  or the power x 2 = 2 x 4 . Mathematically, every number b b can be represented as the power of another: 𝑦 = 𝑎𝑥, or it also happens that a power with a negative exponent is equal to the inverse of the number raised to a positive 1 exponent, a  n  n . In this way you can continue establishing relationships of a opposites between numbers. The logical relationships between mathematical objects occur at the level of ideas, they are not always reproducible or possible to represent in relation to the physical world or the material conditions of existence. However, mathematics does deal with the abstraction of numerical characteristics from physical properties. Engels (1961) points out that the concept of variable magnitude introduced by Descartes causes a turning point that introduces movement and dialectics to mathematics. Another issue observed in math classes is that teachers present the number as something eminently quantitative. Indeed, the number is a quantitative entity, but numbers are distinguished by their qualitative characteristics. In this way 4 is equal to 4, but at the same time, it can be 4 times 1, it can also be 2 times 2, and the square root of 16. That is, a 4 can be the cardinality of a set, the result of an addition, the power of a number, or the root of another number. In addition, 1 is the basic number of any numbering system, and for 1 it is true that 12 , 1,1−1 is always equal to 1. The same thing happens with any power raised to 0, a0 = 1. With this, the numerical value that can be something objective becomes subjective, and its ontology begins to depend on the context, even if this context is ideal. In order to perform operations with fractions, 11-year-old students know the prime numbers. These numbers correspond to a nominal qualitative category. They differ by their characteristics from the rest of the numbers, just like even numbers or multiples of 3 do, to cite an example. To refer to the use of the qualitative in mathematics, Engels (1961) mentions how the terms infinitely small or infinitely large are used, introducing qualitative differences even as qualitative antitheses of an insurmountable type. That is, the terms refer to immeasurably different quantities, where the number is not enough to determine the difference and mathematics must use qualitative arguments to establish the truth of the magnitude. Understanding mathematical knowledge and school mathematics in particular can be a work of deep reflection. In the doctoral research of Sepúlveda (2021), it is mentioned that in order to know the epistemology that teachers have about mathematical knowledge, they were asked how they understand mathematical knowledge, its origin and its nature. All the teachers stated that they had never thought about these issues; however, they tried to respond from their intuition. Here are some of the teachers’ statements:

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P1 I think that mathematics is one, independent of the context in which it works, because its properties and representations are universal. P2 It is an exact science; its nature is the scientific logic that explains the universe. P3 Their origin is independent, they exist by themselves, they should only be discovered and understood by humans. P4 It is in everything that surrounds us, man has discovered it when there is a need. P5 They exist in everything, and man has been discovering them. P6 Its origin must be discovered and deciphered by man. P7 There is one mathematics, and it is universal. P8 There is a mathematics that is universal, its language is unique. P9 As a science there is one, which studies different topics, but has a universal language. Teachers in general do not reflect on the mathematical knowledge they teach, this is due to a lack of time to do so, to management teams that do not favor reflection in schools, or to professional training processes focused on doing and not on reflecting on what it does. When these teachers respond spontaneously, they declare mathematical knowledge as one, that is, they do not recognize other mathematics outside of official mathematics. This shows a mono-epistemic position of knowledge. They also declare that mathematics is a universal knowledge, thereby ignoring the situated character of mathematics as a contextualized human production. They add that they exist by themselves and must be discovered. This is an acceptance of apriorism as a philosophical option. The result of observing a group of teachers during their teaching work showed an important presence of idealistic assumptions in their work and statements. Being unaware of their epistemic ideas, it could be thought that they are a product of the teaching tradition and the general acceptance of mathematical knowledge as ideal objects independent of the physical world. Despite the historical tension between idealism and materialism, the observed discourses tend to privilege a vision of mathematics as a body of universal and immutable objects. To advance in the recognition of human activity in the construction of mathematical knowledge and in the acceptance of its social value, it is necessary to move towards relative epistemological positions. Not doing so and continuing to depreciate the mathematical forms of many is also a form of symbolic violence towards the other that must end (Sepúlveda & Lezama, 2021, p. 18).

21.5 Final Considerations Idealism and materialism are two philosophical currents that understand reality in the opposite way. In the teaching of school mathematics, a classical position of understanding knowledge in ideal terms prevails. The absence of a reflection of this fact by the teachers, both in their initial training and in the institutional and personal processes of professionalization, makes an idealistic presentation of mathematics persist in the school mathematical discourse, a fact that makes it difficult to construct

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meanings. of both mathematical objects and their operational processes. There are efforts by teachers to give context to mathematical objects in order to make them meaningful for students; however, the didactic work needs to continue advancing in considering the mathematical knowledge put into use in real material contexts. Mathematics has played a leading role in the historical processes of humanity and despite the fact that part of it corresponds to ideal or abstract assumptions, it clearly responds to the needs of the development of natural sciences and the technological advance necessary for human subsistence. We consider that the understanding of mathematics as an ideal knowledge may respond to a hereditary factor of culture that has been passed down through generations and that it is necessary to review so that mathematical knowledge reaches a wide level of democratization and thus achieves in society its status of popular and technical use as well as wise.

References Aboites, V., & Aboites, G. (2008). Filosofía de la matemática en el nivel medio superior. Revista latinoamericana de investigación en matemática educativa, 11(1), 9–47. Aczel, A. (2016). En busca del cero: la odisea de un matemático para revelar el origen de los números. Biblioteca Buridán. Arboleda, C. (2002). El problema didáctico y filosófico de la desaxiomatización de las matemáticas. Revista Colombiana de Filosofía de la Ciencia, 3(7), 59–84. Caballero, S. (2006). Un estudio transversal y longitudinal sobre los conocimientos informales de las operaciones aritméticas básicas en niños de educación infantil [Tesis doctoral]. Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid. Cantoral, R. (2013). Teoría Socioepistemológica de la Matemática Educativa. Estudios sobre construcción social del conocimiento. Gedisa. Cantoral, R., Reyes-Gasperini, D., & Montiel, G. (2014). Socioepistemología, Matemáticas y Realidad. Revista Latinoamericana de Etnomatemática, 7(3), 91–116. Cantoral, R., Montiel, G., & Reyes-Gasperini, D. (2015). Análisis del discurso Matemático Escolar en los libros de texto, una mirada desde la Teoría Socioepistemológica. Avances de Investigación en Educación Matemática, 8, 9–28. Celluci, C. (2013). Philosophy of mathematics: Making a fresh start. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 44, 32–42. Dummett, M. (1986). La filosofía de la matemática de Wittgenstein. W. J. González y J.C. León, Trad. 68, 324–348. Universidad de Murcia. Duque, H. (2013). El sentido del número en la cultura maya [Tesis de maestría] Universidad Tecnológica de Pereira, Colombia. Echegoyen J. (1997). La filosofía contemporánea. Ediciones Edinumen, Madrid Engels, F. (1960). Anti-Dühring. Ediciones Pueblos Unidos. Engels, F. (1961). Dialéctica de la naturaleza. Editorial Grijalbo. Marx, K. (2007). Elementos Fundamentales para la Critica de la Economía Política. Siglo XXI Editores. Panorama: Portal educativo de la Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos (6 de mayo de 2019) Entrevista a Ricardo Cantoral y Daniela Reyes Gasperini. Quidel, G., & Sepúlveda, K. (2016). El Rakin, conteo mapuche, un conocimiento con valor de uso. Revista Latinoamericana de Etnomatemática, 9(2), 12–32. Reyes, J. R. (2020). Karl Marx, dialéctica material de la historia. Hallazgos, 17(33), 163–196.

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Ricardo, D. (2001). On the principles of political economy & taxation. Batoche Books. Sepúlveda, K. (2021). Epistemología de los profesores sobre el conocimiento matemático: un estudio socioepistemológico [Tesis doctoral] CICATA del Instituto Politécnico Nacional, México. Sepúlveda, K., & Lezama, J. (2021). Epistemología de los profesores sobre el conocimiento matemático escolar: un estudio de caso. Revista Latinoamericana de Investigación en Matemática Educativa, 24(2), 177–206. Smith, A. (1982). Inquiry into the nature & causes of the wealth of nations. Liberty Fund. Villamil, J., & Riscanevo, L. (2020). Perspectivas históricas y epistemológicas del número cero. Praxis & Saber, 11(26). Zalamea, F. (2021). Filosofía sintética de las matemáticas contemporáneas. Editorial Universidad Nacional de Colombia.

Chapter 22

Cognitive and Neurological Evidence of Nonhuman Animal Mathematics and Implications for Mathematics Education Thomas E. Ricks

22.1 Introduction The belief that “only humans do mathematics” permeates the field of mathematics education (Ricks, 2021; Scheiner & Pinto, 2019). This human-centric perspective is manifest throughout the literature by such phrases as mathematics is a human activity (Freudenthal, 1973, 2002), a human construct (Abbott, 2013), a human construction (Longo, 2003), a human discipline (Fey, 1994), a human endeavor (Dehaene, 2011), a human enterprise (Noddings, 1985), a human invention (Bridgman, 1927), a human potential (Simon, 2007), and a human social activity (Tymoczko, 1980). Many authors directly state their own personal beliefs about the issue; for example, Dörfler (2007) asserted it is a “trivial fact mathematics is a human activity. Under all circumstances mathematics is done and produced by human beings” (p  105). Other authors imply similar beliefs by summarizing the human-centric positions of others, especially Freudenthal (Boaler, 2008; Cobb et  al., 2008; Freudenthal, 1973) Thinking of mathematics as human activity has improved mathematical pedagogy because emphasizing the humanness of the mathematical process refocuses the pedagogy of the subject on the way students make sense of mathematics (Steffe, 1990). But is the mathematics education maxim that mathematics is a uniquely human creation and activity scientifically accurate? If not, how might animal mathematics matter for mathematics education? Much recent scientific research suggests that many nonhuman animals (henceforth, just animals) mathematize as part of their natural behavior (Nieder, 2021). I organize this chapter—a meta-analysis of literature on the subject—around two types of recent scientific evidence for animal mathematics emerging from the field of animal and/or comparative research: cognitive and neurological studies T. E. Ricks (*) School of Education, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USA e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_22

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evidencing legitimate animal mathematizing. Cognitive animal research investigates the psychological underpinnings of animal cognition by developing hypotheses about the way animal minds think, by observing animal behavior, and making inferences about the unobservable animal thought processes necessary to produce such behavior. Neurological animal research investigates the biophysical underpinnings of animal cognition to describe the way animal brains function, by developing schematics of neurological structure based on observable brain signatures. Together, these two lines of scientific evidence reinforce each other and demonstrate at least some forms of animal mathematics exist. I conclude the chapter by considering some implications animal mathematics research may have for the field of mathematics education.

22.2 Cognitive Research on Animal Mathematics Recent cognitive research on a wide range of animals provides substantial evidence of animal mathematical capacity. These non-neurological animal cognition studies investigate animal mathematics through careful scientific experiments that observe mathematical behavior as animals complete research tasks. These studies are peer-­ reviewed, appear in reputable scholarly publications on animal and/or comparative cognition, and control for conflating experimental variables to avoid the possibility of anthropomorphizing animal behavior. I describe two principal areas of observable mathematical behavior mentioned consistently in animal cognitive research: numerical discrimination and basic mathematical competence.

22.2.1 Numerical Discrimination Many animals demonstrate the cognitive capacity to numerically discriminate during experimental trials that control for potentially confounding non-numerical variables like size, density, or luminance. The great apes (Hanus & Call, 2007; Tomonaga & Matsuzawa, 2002) and other nonhuman primates (hereafter, just primates) like monkeys (Gazes et al., 2018) all demonstrate the capacity to numerically discriminate, as well as other mammals (Chacha et al., 2020), birds (Tornick et al., 2015), fish (Seguin & Gerlai, 2017), cuttlefish (Yang & Chiao, 2016), frogs (Stancher et  al., 2015), salamanders (Uller et  al., 2003), lizards (Miletto Petrazzini et  al., 2018), and insects (Howard, 2018). Two distinct cognitive systems are believed to play a role in animal numerical discrimination: subitizing and the approximate magnitude system. Subitizing  Many animals demonstrate subitizing (also subitising, exact number system (ENS), object file system (OFS), or object tracking system (OTS) (Nieder, 2020a))—the rapid, highly accurate, cognitive capacity to numerate small groups of

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objects—a special form of numerical discrimination also present in humans from birth (Brannon & Terrace, 1998). The typical (including human) subitizing range is four or less elements (Dehaene, 2011), but some species naturally subitize past the normal subitizing range, including pigeons (up to five), budgerigars and jackdaws (up to six), and ravens, Amazon and African grey parrots, magpies, and squirrels (up to seven) (Al Aïn et al., 2009; Davis & Pérusse, 1988; Hassenstein, 1974; Hassmann, 1952; Howard, 2018; Nieder, 2005). This uncanny natural ability for numerosity was first investigated (in humans) by Jevons (1871) and later coined subitizing (Latin for sudden) by Kaufman et al. (1949). Dehaene (2011) popularized the term for mathematics educators with his The Number Sense book (de Freitas & Sinclair, 2016) that detailed subitizing capacities in human infants and a few common animal species, like rats and pigeons. Howard et  al. (2018) calls subitizing a “counting mechanism with low quantities” (p 11). Subitizing appears to be widespread in the animal kingdom; De Cruz (2006) claims that every animal species tested so far for this capacity has demonstrated it. Subitizing is legitimate mathematics because it allows animals to discriminate specific numerosities that convey “the cardinality of [a] set” of perceived items (Nieder & Dehaene, 2009, p 186). Subitizing offers a concrete description of animal numerical capacity and is supported by a hundred years of intensive scientific research (Clements et al., 2019; Jevons, 1871). And lest we dismiss subitizing as non-mathematical, attempts by humans to mimic this simple counting capacity in computer vision have required sophisticated human mathematical algorithms— including convoluted neural networks (Zhang et al., 2015)—and is an active area of ongoing mathematical research (Pezzelle, 2018). Approximate Magnitude System  The ability of animals to discriminate numerosity is not limited to the subitizing range. Much research confirms (Dehaene, 1992; Gallistel & Gelman, 1992; Nieder, 2020a) that many animals possess an approximate magnitude system (AMS), a capacity to represent any quantity (with no upper limit!) as a rough estimation—also referred to as the analog magnitude system, analog format, or the approximate number system (ANS) (Cantlon, 2012). Whatever its name, the nature of this capacity differs from the exact number system (ENS) of subitizing; the AMS always entails fuzzy estimation (akin to probability distributions) instead of recognizing discrete quantity. Like subitizing, the AMS is another example of an underlying, phylogenetically-embedded, biologically-determined, numerical capacity shared by both animals and humans (Nieder, 2013). If metaphorically represented on a number line, the AMS perceives an observed (objective) countable quantity as a logarithmically symmetric continuous possibility (subjective) centering on the objective quantity and tapering off to overlap and conflate with nearby surrounding numerical possibilities. The larger the objective quantity observed, the greater the potential spread of the probable possibility, and the more likely the observer is to confuse the objective quantity with similar quantities, something called the numerical size effect (Nieder, 2020a). If an animal compares two quantities, the accuracy of differentiating their difference (or

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recognizing their similarity) decreases as the quantities converge numerically. For example, Stancher et al. (2015) describe how frogs struggle to differentiate between areas of food having four versus three items but regularly choose six food-item areas over three food-item areas. This capacity to increasingly differentiate between numerosities as the difference between the numerosities increases is known as the numerical distance effect (Nieder, 2020a). Numerous studies document this similarity of animals and humans to represent discrete, potentially countable quantities as nebulous, indistinct judgments of numerosity (Cantlon, 2012; Dehaene, 1992; Gallistel & Gelman, 1992). Surprisingly, the capacity to discriminate numerosity is also documented in some rather tinier-than-amphibians-and-reptiles creatures. For example, much research on the lowly honeybee demonstrates their ability to discriminate numerosities within the normal subitizing range as they navigate and track the number of landmarks while foraging (Chittka & Geiger, 1995; see also Bortot et al., 2019; Howard et al., 2018; Howard et al., 2020). Howard et al. (2018) documents that with training, honeybees outperformed capacities previously reported in the literature, including “differentiating a correct choice consistent with rule learning compared to an incorrect choice consistent with associative mechanisms” (pp  212–213), “discriminat[ing] challenging ratios of number[s]” (p 213), “learn[ing] numerical rules” (p  213), applying numerical rules “to value zero numerosity” (p  213), “perform[ing] simple arithmetic” (p  213), and “associat[ing] a symbol [with] a specific quantity” (p 213). Although research publications documenting animal numerosity capacity are obviously more prolific for species that are easier to study in laboratory settings, like rats, mice, small fish, domesticated chicks, and honeybees (Howard, 2018), these studies help demonstrate that numerical discrimination is widespread in the animal kingdom, and at least some forms of mathematical cognition do not require large, human-like brains.

22.2.2 Basic Mathematical Competence Once cognitively aware of numerosities through subitizing or the AMS, many animals then utilize those numerosities to demonstrate basic mathematical competence (Nieder, 2013). In this way, animals continue to mathematize in the original Freudenthal (2002) usage that mathematics is applying common sense to quantitatively act upon perceived realities. For example, Nieder (2013) reports: Beyond [AMS’s] discrete quantities, nonhuman primates can also grasp continuous-spatial quantities, such as length [and] relations between quantities resulting in proportions… [M]onkeys perform primitive arithmetic operations such as processing numerosities according to quantitative rules… it is well accepted that numerical competence is… found in animals. (p 2–3)

Additionally, studies on two hundred wild, semi-free rhesus monkeys document the ability of these primates to discriminate normal subitizing-range (four or less)

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numerosities without training as evidenced by their reliable ability—after watching researchers slowly deposit food items one by one within two containers—to choose the container with the greater number of food items (Hauser et  al., 2000). Chimpanzees, however, can discriminate up to 10 items when choosing the larger of two food containers that have also been filled one by one (Beran, 2001; Beran & Beran, 2004). The numerical and problem-solving capacity of the chimpanzee has been known for many decades (Boysen, 1988, 1992; Boysen & Berntson, 1989; Boysen et al., 1993; Dooley & Gill, 1977; Ferster, 1964; Matsuzawa, 1985; Muncer, 1983; Rumbaugh et al., 1987; Woodruff & Premack, 1981). Clearly, humans do much mathematics that animals cannot do, primarily because humans have a refined ability for symbolization (Nieder, 2020b). But animals not doing all of human mathematics should not prevent the realization of the mathematics that they can do. Describing what mathematical capacities different  animals manifest and how they relate to developing human mathematical capacities is in its infancy. Keeping track of which animals do what mathematics presents challenges, especially as no descriptive theory of mathematical sophistication is universally accepted. Many different ways of organizing animal mathematical capacity and linking it to what humans can do—at which age-level or developmental level—have been proposed. Howard (2018, p 12–13, 195, 197, modified and adapted for prose) elegantly summarized animal cognition research on numerical mathematical competence by creating an intermeshed matrix of eight numerical concepts: zero numerosity, quantical cognition, subitizing, approximate (or analogue) magnitude system, arithmetic, numerical cognition, numerical competence, and true counting) with 23 unique numerical tasks (the italicized text that follows will be explained later in the chapter): (1) sensory representation of zero; (2) categorical understanding of “nothing”; (3) quantitative understanding of zero numerosity; (4) symbolic and mathematical use of zero; (5) use of nonnumerical cues correlated with number; (6) quantity discrimination of numerosities below five elements; (7) subitizing; (8) quantity discrimination which obeys Weber’s Law; (9) discriminate numbers above four; (10) [serially] counting above four; (11) spontaneous arithmetic-like reasoning; (12) symbolic representation of numbers in arithmetic; (13) symbol and number matching; (14) exact number use; (15) arithmetic problems; (16) nominal number use; (17) ordinality [ranking of sets]; (18) cardinality [valuation of sets]; (19) novel representation of number; (20) transfer to novel numbers; (21) procedural translation of numbers; (22) modality transfer of numbers; and (23) symbolic representation and quantitative valuing of symbols. Animal research studies have documented that various animals have accomplished at one time or another 21 of the 23 unique numerical tasks. No evidence exists yet for animal symbolic and mathematical use of zero, or nominal number use; only humans have demonstrated these capacities. Considering that it took thousands of years for humans to develop modern mathematical competencies of zero, it should not be surprising that human use of zero is not yet documented in animal behavior. Further, nominal number use—an integral part of the symbol-laden, modern human culture—has not been seen in animal behavior either.

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Intriguingly, honeybees demonstrate mathematical capacity in all eight numerical concept categories, and of the 23 unique numerical tasks, research confirms honeybees can manifest at least 14 of them (italicized in the list above, Howard, 2018, p 197; see p 173 for preliminary evidence of ordinality of sets, which might make 15 total). If we add one more task completion—the lowly sensory representation of zero—which I assume bees fulfill, considering their competence with zero numerosity (no one has yet studied sensory representation of zero in honeybees)— honeybees manifest mathematical capacity in over two-thirds of the categories. Imagine! All that, done by the little, humble honeybee, with a tiny brain over 80,000 times smaller than the human brain (roughly one million neurons compared with humans’ 86 billion neurons) (Azevedo et al., 2009; Menzel & Giurfa, 2001). For such a tiny brain, the bee brain manifests significant mathematical power; humans have yet to develop comparable mathematics to match the honeybee’s zero mathematical competence through machine learning. Researchers (Schmicker & Schmicker, 2018) have built a three-layered neural network to mimic the findings about “the quantitative value of an empty set” (Howard, 2018, p 212) that honeybees manifest through standard animal cognition training; the neural network was “trained using the same stimuli and protocol” (Howard, 2018, p 212) that the bee experiments used. Howard et al. (2018) admits: “We still have a lot to learn from biologically evolved processing systems, such as the honeybee brain, as while bees… took less than 100 trials to learn the task, the simple neural network took about 4 million trials to learn the same task” (p 212, emphasis added). And experts in the field of honeybee cognition believe with proper experimental setups and further research, honeybees may accomplish several more of the remaining unique numerical tasks, although their short lifetime limits training opportunities (Howard, 2018). This high ratio (roughly two-thirds) of numerical mathematical task-­completion found in honeybees but not other species may be as much a function of the ease of using honeybees for animal cognition research as a measure of their mathematical competence; other animals may demonstrate similar or greater mathematical capacity once research is conducted on those more difficult-to-study species. As the field of animal cognition continues to mature, more and more mathematical capacities are being discovered in more and more species. The abilities to subitize and approximate numerosity have obvious evolutionary (e.g., natural selection) advantages: “Numerical competence... is of adaptive value. It enhances an animal’s ability to survive by exploiting food sources, hunting prey, avoiding predation, navigating, and persisting in social interactions” (Nieder, 2020a, p  605). For the animal cognition researcher, the question is no longer if animals mathematize, but how (Nieder, 2013).

22.3 Neurological Research on Animal Mathematics Neurological research on animal brains (conducted while animals manifest mathematical-like behavior) strengthens the argument that animals are indeed doing legitimate mathematics by documenting “the neuronal mechanisms of numerical

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competence” (Nieder & Dehaene, 2009, p  186). Two branches of neurological evidence support the legitimacy of animal mathematics: “number neurons” and the similarity between human and animal brain activation while mathematizing.

22.3.1 Number Neurons Many researchers have documented so-called number neurons (Dehaene, 2002, 2011; Nieder, 2013; Piazza & Dehaene, 2004) in various animal species’ brains while performing mathematical tasks. Number neurons are specific neurons in special regions of animals’ brains that spike electrically when the animal receives numerical stimuli in visual or auditory form (e.g., dots on a screen, sequential tones), or mentally numerates body motions, like limb motions (Nieder et al., 2002; Sawamura et  al., 2002). First identified in domestic cat brains (Thompson et  al., 1970), number neurons have also been documented in crow (Ditz & Nieder, 2015), rhesus monkey (Nieder, 2013), and Japanese macaque monkey brains (Sawamura et al., 2002). To find the number neurons, researchers surgically insert super-thin wires into specific math-related brain regions and slowly adjust the depth of the wire until a number neuron (tuned to the desired numerosity researchers wish to study) is identified. These specialized nerve cells are “tuned to the number of [sensory] items [experienced] show[ing] maximum [signal] activity to one of the presented quantities—a neuron’s preferred numerosity—and a progressive drop off as the quantity [becomes] more remote from the preferred number” (Nieder & Dehaene, 2009, pp 188–189). Researchers found, for example, in a monkey’s prefrontal cortex (Nieder & Merten, 2007), a neuron tuned to the quantity of 20 (as well as one tuned to the quantity of 6, another to 4, and one for 2); the fact that specific neurons in a monkey’s brain differentiate a visual spread of 20 dots from other presentations of dots is admittedly quite impressive. Some number neurons encode for perceived numerosity (input modality, like viewing dots on a screen or hearing a sequence of tones) and others for psychophysical movement (output modality, such as keeping track of body movements) (Nieder & Miller, 2004; Sawamura et al., 2002). In certain regions of the brains of monkeys, number neurons cluster in high percentages; Viswanathan and Nieder (2013) found in the ventral intraparietal area (VIP) of the intraparietal sulcus (IPS)  that 10% of sampled neurons evidenced exclusively numerosity-­ selective spiking. In one study, (Nieder et al. 2006), three separate types of number neurons were found: (1) a type only encoding numerical information perceived simultaneously (spatial: as in a spread of dots on a screen), (2) a type only encoding numerical information perceived sequentially (temporal: as in food items placed in a bowl one by one, a series of auditory tones, or a sequence of flashing lights), and (3) a third type of number neuron that integrated the numerosities encoded by the first two types of neurons, for storage in memory. The colloquial term “number neurons” can be a bit misleading, because these neurons encode more than just numerosity. Tudusciuc and Nieder (2007) discovered

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that roughly one-fifth of neurons in the monkey IPS spiked for numerosity and/or continuous quantity. Findings by other researchers demonstrate number neurons can encode for nonnumerical parameters such as size, luminance, angle, position, and density (Cohen Kadosh & Henik, 2006; Pinel et al., 2004; Zago et al., 2008). Bongard and Nieder (2010) found that individual monkey prefrontal cortex number neurons “can flexibly represent highly abstract mathematical rules” (p 2279), such as greater than/less than concepts, helping monkeys at the macroscale to consciously “understand relations between numerosities and how to apply them successfully in a goal-directed manner” (p 2279). Some researchers have found interlinked number neurons (Diester & Nieder, 2008) that mutually inhibit or mutually reinforce each other’s numerate spike potential. Brains are vast interconnected structures of neurons, so no real surprise to find interconnected neurons; what is surprising is that the interactions form a type of intricate back-and-forth neuronal dialogue instead of just signals cascading from one nerve cell to the next. Both neurons “talk” to each other simultaneously to influence each other during the entire numeration-spiking process. Diester and Nieder (2008) posit this process enables more refined tuning by number neurons to their preferred numerosity. These interlinked number neurons evidence mathematical communication at the smallest inter-cellular level. In 2013, Viswanathan and Nieder controlled for the possibility that neurons were manifesting trained animal conditioning (instead of numerosity) by designing a clever experiment testing monkeys’ sense of color with colored dots; while running these color experiments (that varied the numerosity of the same-colored dots), the number neurons of each monkey were also being recorded electronically. Even though these monkeys had not been trained to discriminate numerosity, and could not differentiate numerosity behaviorally (the monkeys were tested later for their numerical capacity with the same dot patterns—this time in black—and showed scores no better than random chance), the number neurons in monkeys’ brains encoded the number of dots appearing on the colored screens. This series of experiments confirm that monkey number neurons intuitively recognize numerosity, even though the animal has not received numerical training by researchers. Recent studies have investigated “number neurons” in humans. In 2004, noninvasive functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies on human brain blood flow patterns by Piazza et al. (2004) suggested the existence of similar tuning curves for numerosity in human brains to those operating in animals. In 2009, Jacob’s and Nieder’s work hinted human number neurons exist from evidence gathered through electrocorticography readings of masses of spiking neurons; groups of neurons were behaving similarly to the way number neurons would. In 2013, Shum et al. described the surgical implantation of 157 electrodes on the underside of the brains of seven epilepsy patients, a rare example of human intracranial electroencephalography. They reported “identifying the precise anatomical location of neurons with a preferential response to visual numerals… embedded within a larger pool of neurons that respond nonpreferentially to visual symbols that have lines, angles, and curves” (Shum et al., 2013, p 6712). Then in 2018, Kutter et al. reported finding individual number neurons in human neurosurgical patients, specifically “585 single neurons in... nine human subjects performing... calculation tasks” (p 754). They

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summarize their findings thus: “Using single-cell recordings in subjects performing a calculation task, we have shown that single neurons in... humans are tuned to numerical values in nonsymbolic dot displays. The data about nonsymbolic number coding from humans can now be compared to those of nonhuman primates” (Kutter et al., 2018, p 758).

22.3.2 Similar Brain Signatures In addition to the existence of number neurons in humans, animal brain-imaging signatures are similar to those of humans while performing similar mathematical tasks. Numerous studies document that the very same regions activate in both primates’ and humans’ brains when research subjects (primate or human) perform a similar mathematical activity (Arsalidou & Taylor, 2011; Nieder, 2021; Tudusciuc & Nieder, 2007). Such comparisons are possible because human and primate brains share similar brain structure (Azevedo et al., 2009). Neurological research suggests two similar areas in primate and human brains activate when performing mathematical activity: the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) and the prefrontal cortex (PFC) (Amalric & Dehaene, 2019; Arsalidou & Taylor, 2011; Dehaene, 2011; Eger, 2016; Hyde et al., 2010; Nieder, 2012, 2013, 2016; Nieder & Dehaene, 2009; Nieder et al. 2006; Piazza et al., 2007; Shum et al., 2013). In humans, these regions are known for a variety of mathematical competencies, such as algebraic thinking (Maruyama et al., 2012; Monti et al., 2012). Because these two regions play different roles in processing numerosity, the IPS and PFC manifest unique neuroimaging signatures when both primate and human subjects perform mathematical tasks. For example, the IPS processes more nonsymbolic numerosity while the PFC is connected with more symbolic number processing; additionally, the IPS processes the nonsymbolic numerosity before the PFC, suggesting that the PFC gets its numerosity information directly from the IPS (Nieder & Dehaene, 2009). This neuroimaging evidence suggests that humans, even with our powerful and unique symbolic mathematical capabilities not manifest by any animal, still utilize portions of our brains prior to symbolization similar to the way animals mathematize; humans are thus subconsciously doing mathematics like animals—all the time—despite the seemingly non-animal-ness of our conscious, symbol-heavy mathematics. Kutter et  al. (2018) posit: “Our human-specific symbolic number skills… spring from nonsymbolic set size representations…. suggest[ing] number neurons as neuronal basis of human number representations that ultimately give rise to number theory and mathematics” (p 753). In summary, animals not only produce mathematical behavior like humans, implying similar cognitive mathematizing (Cantlon, 2012; Nieder, 2020a), but the way animals’ brains function while producing such behavior is also similar to how human brains do the very same mathematics (Autio et al., 2021), strengthening the argument that animals indeed do at least some forms of mathematizing.

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22.4 Discussion: Animal Mathematics Matters for Mathematics Education Clearly, animals cannot match human mathematical capacity in many areas, especially the sophisticated, symbol-heavy, precision-based mathematics so prevalent in modern technological societies. Why would animal mathematics, therefore, matter for the field of mathematics education? Most obviously, cognitive and neurological animal mathematics studies legitimize the existence of animal mathematics and challenge the common mathematics education belief that only humans mathematize. Thus, the first reason animal mathematics matters for mathematics education is that continued antagonism by mathematics education against the acceptance of animal mathematics is increasingly anachronistic and scientifically inaccurate. It is time for mathematics education to familiarize itself with the burgeoning literature supporting animal mathematics. Secondly, animal mathematics studies deepen and enrich our understanding about the philosophy of human mathematics and related human mathematics education. Animal mathematics studies raise intriguing questions about the nature of mathematics, where it comes from, and how it is so unreasonably effective (Wigner, 1960). Such research on animal mathematics supports previous researchers’ beliefs—e.g., Piaget—on the potential biological roots of mathematical development (Brannon, 2014; Duda, 2017; Piaget, 1971). But perhaps the most important reason studies about animal mathematics matter for mathematics education is these studies reveal the similarity between human and animal mathematics. Together, the comparative cognition and neurological research evidence suggest that humans share with animals basic, underlying mathematical capacities continuously operating in the cognitive/neurological background, even when humans do more sophisticated, human-unique mathematics. Neonates, nonverbal infants, children, adults—even professional mathematicians—manifest animal-like mathematics while performing human mathematics (Nieder & Dehaene, 2009). Thus, animal mathematics matters for mathematics education not so much because animals sometimes mathematize like humans, but because humans always mathematize like animals. For example, the presence of the numerical distance effect by “human number neurons… supports the hypothesis that high-level human numerical abilities are rooted in biologically determined mechanisms” (Kutter et al., 2018, p 759). This evidence suggests that human symbolic mathematics is an outgrowth of evolutionarily ancient mathematics that we share with animals, being “deeply rooted in our neuronal heritage as primates and vertebrates” (Nieder, 2020a, p 28). All humans—regardless of the type, sophistication, or level of mathematizing, and regardless of the age, developmental status, or training (including the professional mathematicians!)—appear to mathematize with foundational, animal-­ like numerosity processing at the autonomous neuronal level, because human “symbolic number cognition [is] grounded in neuronal circuits devoted to deriving precise numerical values from approximate numerosity representations” (Kutter et  al., 2018, p  759). The fact that humans share with animals a distinct

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“math-­ responsive network” (Amalric & Dehaene, 2019) activated during both sophisticated, human-only mathematical thinking as well as the more mundane— and that neuroimaging differentiates these human brain regions from human semantic networks (Nieder & Dehaene, 2009)—suggest that human mathematics consists of more than just the symbolic processing that only humans possess. Human mathematical thinking is fundamentally rooted in biological core systems shared with animals that always activate during any type of human mathematizing (Dehaene et  al., 2006; Xu & Spelke, 2000). These shared forms of mathematical thinking—so different from the symbol-heavy, precision-based modern mathematics so emphasized in contemporary mathematics classrooms—are always percolating in the encephalic background. They form consistent, powerful ways of mathematizing about our world that need more attention in mathematics education pedagogy and scholarship. Our curricular over-emphasis on symbols, terms, procedures, and precision already disenfranchises students, especially those manifesting neurodiversity (de Freitas & Sinclair, 2016); we should make room in our curriculum and research for more understanding of the animal-like mathematics that all humans manifest whenever they mathematize. Animal mathematics acceptance by mathematics educators has the potential to influence many theories of and in mathematics education (Bikner-Ahsbahs & Vohns, 2019). In particular, animal mathematics research illuminates similar underlying neuronal circuitry responsible for human mathematical thinking. Further, animal mathematics research is already improving understanding of various mathematical disabilities such as dyscalculia (Anobile et  al., 2018; Ansari, 2008; Butterworth, 2005; Butterworth et  al., 2011; Castaldi et al., 2018; Kucian et al., 2011; Mazzocco et al., 2011; Piazza et al., 2010; Rubinsten & Sury, 2011) and opens avenues for productive translational research (Bisazza & Santacà, 2022) to improve student learning outcomes (Iuculano & Cohen Kadosh, 2014; Piazza et al., 2013).

22.5 Conclusion This chapter has challenged the common, contemporary mathematics education belief that only humans create and do mathematics by highlighting emerging cognitive and neurological evidence that animal mathematics exists and is similar to at least some forms of human mathematics. Further, comparative cognitive and neurological research suggest that all humans manifest animal-like mathematics even when doing human-only mathematics. Accepting animal mathematics by the mathematics education community will augment the work of mathematics education by illuminating better the foundational cognitive and neurological manner in which humans create and do mathematics.

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Part V

Concluding

Chapter 23

Living in the Ongoing Moment Bronisław Czarnocha and Małgorzata Marciniak

The time of preparation of this manuscript was marked by the appearance of an advanced artificial intelligence (AI) product, in the form of ChatGPT. This new, unusual, yet somehow expected feature, has confronted all of us, humans and in particular the educators with its power and possible impact upon mathematics classrooms. From the point of view of the philosophy of mathematics education, AI inspires more questions and directions for research investigations, possibly making a topic for another book. Thus, this summary chapter is written in a very particular way creating more questions within the themes provided by the authors. Looking back at the process of the creation of the book, we see that it was very fortunate that AI became vastly available after the main chapters have been written because they represent the state of our philosophizing before AI has appeared. So now when the manuscript has been completed and all chapters are assembled, we, the editors, can look back at our work and reflect on the concept of the current book taking into account the new AI component. This brings a host of new questions, all of them centered on how the philosophy of mathematics education can guide us to the doorstep of the new scientific and cultural revolution that AI is clearly announcing. Marciniak (Chap. 12) discusses the paradigm shifts in the history of mathematics education, and it seems to be clear that fundamental paradigm shifts are upon us. At present, the parameters and scopes of those changes are very difficult to assess as we do not know yet either the possibilities or limits of AI’s impact on humans. In the further parts of the summary chapter, we will approach the question of the

B. Czarnocha Hostos Community College, CUNY, New York, NY, USA M. Marciniak (*) LaGuardia Community College of the City University of New York, Long Island City, NY, USA e-mail: [email protected] © The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6_23

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philosophy of mathematics education and AI by articulating explicit and implicit theme concerns of the chapters’ authors. But wait. Who are the authors? Who are the mathematics education philosophers? What inspires them and what are the methods of their works? Are they young or old in age or philosophical experience, do they work in academia, do they write about class practice or analyze statistical data? What are they trying to accomplish with their writing? Bicudo (Chap. 3) emphasizes the realization of philosophical thinking. Thus, we ask, what even is this philosophy of mathematics education? What topics should be discussed? Watson (Chap. 6) skillfully locates mathematics education in a contemporary system theory, while Czarnocha (Chap. 8) suggested that philosophy of the domain starts from examination of its fundamental problems. Thus, a new fundamental problem has appeared during the time of writing the book: what issues does mathematics education need to consider in the light of the skills of ChatGPT and other advanced chatbots, which are with no doubt coming in the near future (as in the new Bing searching engine). The book displays a plethora of themes in philosophy of mathematics education and a cornucopia of ideas bringing together authors from multiple cultures, nationalities, and countries across five continents. As expected, these authors think in many directions in their own, unique ways, about a variety of topics, carrying their ideas across through as many pages as they need. Some authors zoom out spreading their work across many topics, while others zoom in and focus on one, well-defined theme. Others reflect on the past, present, and future, while some simply find one time frame and one place to address the needs of mathematics education that are important to them. Thus, we hear. We listen to their voices when they strive to answer the question that has been nurturing teachers for centuries. Why is mathematics, this queen of sciences, somehow not so likable to the students? Why does she cause such a stress and anxiety among students? What can the teachers do to ease the presence of the queen and make her more accessible and more approachable to future generations? One of the most frequent complaints of students about mathematics is that it is disconnected from reality. However, it is physics, the source of many mathematical ideas and ultimately the king of sciences, that brings these connections forward. Will AI be able to bridge the gap between theory and reality and thus make mathematics, the queen of sciences, not only likable but a fully fledged member of the human community? Ernest (Chap. 1) is asking a relevant question of the ontology of our subject that is philosophy of mathematics education: “The ontological problem of mathematics education concerns persons. What is the nature and being of persons, including both children and adults, or precisely the mathematical identity of mathematicians and the developing mathematical identities of students? What are these mathematical identities and how are they constituted?” What is the mathematical identity of the ChatGPT or its more advanced versions? How can the mathematical identity of a chatbot contribute to the development and formation of the mathematical identity of a human student? That question becomes a bit more acute taking into account John Mason’s (Chap. 5) focus on the process of abstraction as a component of mathematical identity. Abstracting is here seen as a change of a

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relationship between the person and the set of words, and hence a change of the relationship with self-constructed “virtual objects.” Can AI creatures undertake such a change of mathematical identity through abstracting? More precisely, can AI creatures abstract? If we look at abstraction categorically as a forgetting functor, AI should have no problem with it. We wonder what could be the AI creature’s relationship or its change with the AI-constructed “virtual” mathematical object. Would there be a relationship? Goldin (Chap. 7) raises the ante asking for the self-integrity of philosophy of mathematics education; in particular he examines the question of mathematical validity and objectivity on one hand and its sociocultural origins, on the other. While the relationship between the two has been the place of strong disagreements, Goldin searches for the integrated approach where both principles, seemingly contradictory, are shown the possibility to coexist. How would AI creatures relate to such a situation, generating a compromising approach to the two seemingly incompatible principles, or objectivity and cultural subjectivity? Creation of such a compromise requires bisociative thinking that arises simultaneously out of two unconnected matrices of thought, a concept explored by Czarnocha in (Chap. 8). This is a creative process, and if AI creatures can do such constructions, it would mean they are indeed creative. Are they? Would they? Creativity is held as the uniquely human capacity, on the very border between humans and automation. Can AI creatures have experience – if such a term makes sense here? Or if creativity is the feature differentiating humans from AI, should education withdraw from its traditional testing approaches and focus on facilitating creativity? Similar questions are brought forward by the concept of internalization of mathematics via the process of learning as studied by Baker (Chap. 9). Maybe instead of teaching more content, we may focus on teaching more intensely even if it leads to writing poems about the Pythagorean Theorem. This remains within the curriculum inquiry of what to teach and how to measure progress. The sociocultural grounds of mathematics and mathematics education raised by Goldin and pursued by authors such as Miguel et al. (Chap. 18), Maurício Rosa (Chap. 19), and Obreque and Andalon (Chap. 21) bring new questions and concerns related to the AI industry. Given that AI creatures are made by us humans, we face the challenge of how to avoid imparting to it our own sociocultural biases. Who and how verifies whether AI may be biased against people of color or indigenous students? Similarly, we can ask whether it may be biased against females or LGBTQ. Who trains AI’s non-bias toward all possible groups of people? Is the ethics of AI, even within a small scope of education, a subject of training? Or a subject of firm rules imprinted into the system as unchangeable? Who and based on what principles makes decisions about such setup? More than that, if asked, would AI display ethical judgments and what would be the value of such display? Taking into account the Ubuntu philosophy of life as essentially communal, and rejecting individualistic features, how to embrace AI’s development globally? How could AI accommodate a vast sociocultural milieu remaining ethical towards all subjects? Finally, pursuing the ideas of Obreque and Andalon, the question arises whether AI creatures operate on an idealistic basis having their ideas

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implanted a priori by humans or it is a materialistic creature that derives its knowledge from the motion of matter within its circuitry. Implications of futuristically advanced and broadly available AI are quite unpredictable, although the Commander Data of the Second-Generation Star Trek series, the human android explores the horizon of these implications. This is a worthy question since interactions with AI are inevitably going to change future humans. While thinking today about future education, we would like to take that change into consideration, even if this task seems quite challenging, if even possible. We already are aware of the influence of technology on young people and are aware of some who spend their childhood playing video games. However, they still realize the value of human interactions and miss them during remote instruction. Are such human-AI interactions working for the progress of the human mind? Shall we limit such interactions for the sake of the mental and social health of students? According to Matsushima (Chap. 10) dialogues among humans improve mathematics learning. Would a similar feature take place for interactions between humans and AI? Fearing that interactions with AI may disturb someone’s view of reality, one can ask: what even is reality? Can mathematical modeling be used to model the reality that is coming? In his work (Chap. 16) Schürmann discusses classroom-level mathematical modeling and its philosophical aspects mainly in the light of the relationship between the model and the actual observations. But now, the multifold of realities that contain the real world and the mathematical world are being expanded by the reality of IA. Can AI model itself if asked about it, or in other words, what are possible states of self-awareness of the AI creatures? What would be the validity of such AI-made models in the view of syntactics? Commander Data of Star Trek was fully aware of his being as the complex interplay of many algorithms connected with the complete absence of feelings, of human feelings, and that fact was of some concern to him as he could not bridge it. On the other hand, as we know from the works of Chamberlin, Liljedahl, and Savic (2022), affect plays a fundamental role in the process of learning mathematics, in the development of mathematical intimacy, and in bonding with mathematics. What would be the role of AI here? Nevertheless, if reality can be influenced by education, then rethinking education is mandatory for the sake of future generations. And educational paradigms should be defined anew. In this new education, what would be the place for Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) as discussed by Hui Chuan Li (Chap. 17)? Considering the fast pace of the ongoing changes, one could even doubt whether ESD can be set up before its value expires. May the goal of matching education with the needs of society or an individual be an ever-moving target? With the most disputable topics related to the values of performative skills, Ole Skovsmose (Chap. 14) introduces the concept of performative mathematics opening a variety of discussions. What new features of performative analysis will AI bring? Will AI be able to perform mathematics the same way we do? In all aspects? Or maybe studying the struggle of AI will allow a better understanding of the difficulties of students’ performance. Or having handy and always available AI to perform for us, shall we withdraw from seeing value in performative skills? But can AI perform the entire spectrum of (mathematical) thinking available to humans? For example, can AI

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perform inquiry? Produce mathematical knowledge in the way presented by Stoyanova-Kennedy (Chap. 15)? Can AI pose meaningful problems and reason about solution methods? We asked ChatGPT to design a few problems related to graphing certain functions, and the results were unimpressive; thus, we began to wonder whether AI will ever be able to draw meaningful conclusions. Understand (mathematical) jokes? Could AI understand mathematical paradoxes valued so much by Yenealem Ayalev (Chap. 13)? Will AI ever understand infinity? What strategy should be applied in education then? Should teaching mathematics include more paradoxes as an attempt to differentiate human learning from artificial learning? Or this would be a missed attempt and possibly, philosophizing will remain the only human activity not mastered by AI? Discussion of the limitations of AI brings a fundamental question of whether AI can ever become sentient and develop any form of self-awareness. Can AI ever be aware of their states of mind? Can AI be aware of its own subtle leaps of awareness the same way humans are, as presented by Hausberger and Patras (Chap. 4)? Maybe when discussing teaching mathematics, one should follow the idea of separating mathematical formalism and intuition. Min Bahadur Shresta (Chap. 20) draws our attention to the fact that formal mathematics is a relatively recent (nineteenth and twentieth centuries) discovery emphasizing the fact that for centuries, humans have been performing mathematics without formalism and axiomatization. It is quite clear that while AI can master logical aspects of mathematics, it is likely that humans can master intuitive mathematics much better than AI. Should mathematics education then reduce logical math and emphasize intuitive math? Being not burdened anymore by the necessity of carrying all algebraic manipulations flawlessly, shall we expect that students will joyfully engage in abstract mathematical thinking? Somehow, based on our current experience as college teachers, we do not see it coming anytime soon since the current attitude skews more toward avoidance than engagement into abstracting. But maybe it is just an intermediate stage between old and new education. However, intuitive performance carries a serious challenge for education as it is difficult to measure its progress. And measuring progress is a valid factor of education for society. How should the progress of students’ learning be evaluated then? Can AI help with the matter of valid assessment? Interestingly, humans are not the only species performing mathematics intuitively. Thomas E.  Ricks (Chap. 22) describes animals performing mathematics, but they do not worry about the quality of their performance and certainly not the grades. Potentially, animal brains developing mathematical thinking can give hints on how little children can develop mathematical thinking in an organic, natural way. If animals can mathematize, then is it possible that AI could mathematize on its own? On the more practical side, could AI in the future act as a skillful interpreter between animal languages and human languages so we can, in particular, understand the development of mathematization in animals? In this big excitement about AI, we still need to remember that it is just an algorithm, a finite sequence of rigorous instructions performed by a machine. The nature of human thinking is not exactly of this type, since we do not always carry the same rigor and the finiteness of the instructions is uncertain. Following suggestions by

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Regina D. Möller and Peter Collignon (Chap. 11), should future education significantly increase the teaching of algorithms? To what extent? Shall students learn the peaceful history of programming instead of the violent history of human wars and uprisings? And learn programming languages instead of human languages? Programming languages may be quite useful but are applications at the center of the education we want to design? One of the central issues in our initial discussion of the relationship between mathematics education and artificial intelligence is creativity. The previous discussion of feelings, intuition, and algorithms lead to the role of AI creatures in mathematical creativity, within the emerging domain of philosophy of creativity. Will interaction with AI enhance human mathematical creativity or will limit our creative endeavors? That depends a bit on the degree to which the AI creatures themselves are creative and how they can facilitate human creativity. At present, Margaret Boden (2004) assures us that AI can go as far as “to seem being creative” without yet any indication as to whether “it is creative.” How does this matter for mathematics education? There certainly is a difference in the quality of interactions between interacting with the entity that seems to be creative and the one that is creative. It seems that imitation of creativity only permits receiving the results of the process and prevents co-creation, which is the most joyful aspect of true creativity. All these topics touched by the authors may be disputed in the light of theories of scientific revolutions as performed just like by Otte and Radu (Chap. 2), from Popper to Heisenberg. Hopefully AI will have something to suggest in relation to future transformations of sciences and education. While feeling very present in this ongoing moment and philosophizing about the future, using previously acquired knowledge, we find space to observe one more leap of mind. Following it, we emerge in an imaginary world of a Polish futurist Stanislaw Lem. His book Fables for Robots (1964) contains stories written by and for AI. We find this futuristic literature very soothing as it fits exactly between clairvoyance and philosophy of the future influences of AI on human reality.

References Boden, M. A. (2004). The creative mind: Myths and mechanisms (second ed.). Chamberlin S, Liljedahl P, Savic M, Editors (2022) Mathematical creativity: A developmental perspective, Springer. Lem, S. (1964). Fables for robots, (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Literackie.

Index

A Abstract, 87–101 Abstracting, 14, 103, 104, 107–116, 118, 119, 121, 122, 462, 463, 465 Abstraction, 4, 8–14, 17, 38, 47, 50, 76, 303, 335, 361, 365, 414, 436, 439, 462, 463 Accommodation, 183, 184, 187, 188, 194, 196, 366 Action scheme, 186, 188–189, 201 Aesthetics, 48–51, 55–60, 87, 144, 155, 156, 179, 269, 298, 301, 361, 376, 393, 405, 427 Aha! moment, 167–178 Algorithms, 119, 150, 168, 227–230, 232–236, 279–282, 287, 296, 363, 365–368, 371, 373, 374, 378, 416, 417, 419, 445, 464–466 Analytic philosophy, 60, 277 Animal cognition, 444, 447, 448 Appropriation, 192–193, 197, 199, 200, 202, 203, 205, 209–218, 220–224 Art, 44, 48–50, 56, 58–60, 77, 78, 132, 184, 195, 245, 247, 262, 273, 336, 340, 360 Artificial intelligence (AI), 163, 164, 233, 461–466 Assimilation, 47, 184, 187, 213 Autopoiesis, 127–130 Axiomatic, 43, 44, 54, 79, 97–101, 271, 272, 371, 409–427, 433, 435, 436 B Biological mathematics, 18 Bisociation, 175–177, 184, 186–188, 195, 203

C Categorial knowledge, 65, 71, 76, 81, 84 Chatbot, 462 ChatGPT, 461, 462, 465 Color identification app, 399, 406 Community of inquiry, 265, 299 Complementarity of sense and reference, 52 Conation, 155–157, 175 Constructivism, 125, 142–145, 148, 149, 153, 157, 158, 183, 194–195, 209, 335, 413, 420 Conversation, 6, 7, 20–32, 37, 241, 245, 264, 371, 374 Creative imagination, 29, 165, 253, 254, 263, 264 Creativity, 144, 155, 156, 163–180, 183, 185–187, 195, 223, 224, 240, 264, 463, 466 Creativity and reason, 163, 168, 169, 173 Critical mathematics education, 284, 293, 296, 297, 306, 334 D Decolonial mathematics education, 351–354, 364, 374, 377, 397 Defining, 107, 108, 112–113, 115, 116, 121, 122, 127, 135, 154, 188, 229, 246, 385, 411, 435, 436 Deontic, 7, 12, 13, 17, 18, 36, 37 Dialogic space, 30–31, 36–38 Divergent thinking approach, 165

© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2023 M. A. V. Bicudo et al. (eds.), Ongoing Advancements in Philosophy of Mathematics Education, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-35209-6

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468 E Education for sustainable development (ESD), 331–334, 337–339, 342–344, 464 Empirical truth, 146, 147 Engagement, 23, 27, 36–38, 144, 155–157, 302, 305, 333, 396, 465 Epistemology, 20, 21, 48–51, 56, 87, 127, 143, 157, 179, 294, 295, 297, 304, 363, 430–432, 438, 439 Ethical reflection, 270, 286–288 Exactness, 65, 71, 73, 74, 78, 80 F Fallibilism, 150–153, 355, 356, 359, 361 fMRI imagery, 450 Formalism, 145, 146, 150, 153, 157, 271–273, 275, 335, 359, 361, 363, 412, 413, 415, 420, 423, 465 Futurology, 213, 224, 264, 265, 464, 466 G General education, 228, 233–236 Generalizing, 79, 97, 103, 107–109, 122 Gestalt approach, 165, 166, 177 H Hindu mathematics, 410, 415–420, 424, 426 History of education, 243, 245, 249, 250 Human origins, 141–158 Husserlian horizons, 88, 91, 101 I Idealism, 6, 143, 429–441 Individualism, 4, 19–20, 59, 386 Interiorization, 176, 183, 189–190, 192–194, 196, 197, 203, 205 Internalization, 36, 38, 176, 183, 184, 191–204, 211, 213, 214, 218, 220, 463 Intersubjectivity, 75, 82, 84, 211, 218–220, 222–224 Intuitionism, 145, 146, 271, 273, 335, 420 K Kuhn theory of scientific revolutions, 241 L Language, 6, 46, 66, 88, 129, 144, 185, 210, 243, 255, 270, 309, 313, 335, 351, 385, 431, 465

Index Life-world, 270, 271, 278, 280–282, 285, 286, 288, 343 Logicism, 145–147, 157, 271–273, 275, 312, 335, 420, 423 Luhmann, N., 125–133, 135–137 M Materialism, 429–441 Math classes, 198, 227–230, 232, 234–236, 388, 405, 439 Mathematical actions, 10, 17, 103, 106, 107, 118 Mathematical identity, 3, 16, 18–38, 305, 462, 463 Mathematical objects, 3–18, 36–38, 48, 65, 66, 89, 90, 92, 97, 101, 105, 137, 149, 269, 336, 416, 419, 434, 435, 437–439, 441, 463 Mathematical signs, 5, 6, 10–11, 194 Mathematical structuralism, 97 Mathematics, 3, 44, 63, 88, 103, 125, 141, 163, 183, 210, 227, 239, 253, 269, 293, 309, 332, 351, 382, 409, 429, 443, 461 Mathematics education, 3, 4, 8, 10, 18, 19, 21, 34, 37, 38, 44, 59, 63–67, 69–84, 87, 88, 104, 125–128, 131, 133–138, 141, 142, 144, 147, 148, 150–153, 163–165, 167, 171, 173–180, 183, 229, 231–235, 239–242, 255, 256, 262–264, 285, 286, 306, 311–313, 320, 321, 323, 331–344, 352–355, 368–370, 374–376, 381–406, 412, 443–453, 461–463, 465, 466 Mathematics in action, 270 Mathematization, 51, 55, 60, 65–68, 71, 74, 76–78, 80–82, 255, 294–296, 304, 465 Measurement of creativity, 177 Modelling cycle, 309, 310, 321–326 Moment of insight, 184, 187, 195–197, 200, 203, 204 N Networking theories, 176, 177 Neurology, 443–453 O Objective validity, 141, 143 Ontology, 3, 4, 6, 8, 16–18, 21, 25, 81, 83, 87, 127, 128, 178, 432, 439, 462 P Paradox, 137, 178, 254, 256–259, 261, 262, 265, 272, 273, 311, 372, 421, 425, 465

Index Participatory scheme, 190, 191, 205 Pedagogic actions, 103 Percentage, 231, 400, 403–406, 449 Performative interpretation of language, 271, 275–279, 283 Performative interpretation of mathematics, 269–288 Phenomenology, 72, 75, 76, 87–101, 270, 274, 335, 336 Philosophical inquiry, 65, 293, 294, 297–306 Philosophy, 3, 45, 68, 87, 120, 137, 141, 163, 209, 232, 253, 269, 296, 312, 332, 353, 385, 409, 429, 452, 462 Philosophy of creativity, 163, 164, 166, 170, 172, 177–180, 466 Philosophy of mathematical practice, 271, 274, 275 Philosophy of mathematics, 8, 66, 87, 126, 141, 163, 232, 269, 297, 332, 351, 409, 429, 461 Philosophy of mathematics education, 66, 126, 137, 141–143, 145, 146, 148, 151, 153–158, 232, 236, 275, 343, 351, 374, 461–463 Pivoting moments, 241, 243–250 Platonism, 4–6, 8, 11, 145, 146, 150, 157, 335, 336, 409, 434 Postmodernism, 234, 311 Pre-categorial knowledge, 67–71, 74 Presentism, 8, 15 Proof, 15, 30, 35, 36, 44, 78, 80, 91, 101, 104, 134, 146, 149–151, 153, 156, 255, 273, 336, 353, 355–359, 361–368, 371, 372, 378, 410–413, 415–417, 419, 421, 424–427, 434 Psychology of creativity, 163, 164 R Rational truth, 147, 148, 156 Reality, 3, 15, 21, 25–26, 36, 47–49, 51, 55–59, 64–68, 71, 75, 76, 79–84, 137, 143, 170, 193, 231, 236, 239, 241, 245, 248, 250, 256, 270, 275, 277, 282, 293, 303, 309–313, 321, 322, 325, 326, 336, 367, 368, 370, 385, 393, 395, 396, 402, 414, 429–437, 439, 440, 446, 462, 464, 466

469 Reflective abstraction, 176, 183, 188–189, 200, 202–204 Reflective knowing, 293–297, 306 Remote instruction, 248, 250, 464 Rigor, 67, 356, 357, 359, 409–427, 465 Rules and norms, 7, 13, 18 S Scientific revolution, 43–45, 52, 57, 59, 239, 246, 466 Secondary mathematics, 90, 231, 357 Semiotic, 8, 10, 43, 49–51, 96, 279 Shifts of attention, 101, 103–122 Social construction, 13, 15, 19–22, 384, 430, 432 Sociocultural perspective, 209, 214, 224, 427 Socio-epistemological theory, 429–441 Sociology of mathematics education, 133, 136 Structural racism, 385, 386, 389, 392–394, 404, 405 Subjectivity, 75, 255, 295, 302, 385, 386, 463 Sustainability, 331, 333, 334, 340, 341 Symbolic power, 276–278, 282, 304, 388, 404 Systems theory, 125–138 T Teacher educator, 253, 263, 264 Theory, 5, 45, 64, 88, 125, 157, 165, 183, 219, 231, 234, 241, 256, 272, 313, 334, 356, 397, 413, 429, 447, 462 Theory of Didactical Situations (TDS), 88, 90, 91, 100, 101 21st-century learning priorities, 343 U University Mathematics Education, 101 Upapattis, 417–419, 424, 426, 427 W White mathematics, 387–391, 404, 405 Wittgenstein, L., 6, 7, 15, 21, 24, 29, 30, 351–354, 364–366, 368, 372, 373, 412